@steakster
I should have been more thorough with my explanation. I have more info below.
There could be several possibilities for the hum.
I just remembered that that I made some grounding check rca tools when I made my bottle head crack. I should plug that into the sub.
When end I plug the rca into my pre amp the humming just stays the same (quiet hum in the transformer loud hum in the speaker cone).
4) Bad capacitors in the sub amp.
I will check the tie downs. If it’s not that I was hoping I could find something fir under $200 to fix the hum.
I should have been more thorough with my explanation. I have more info below.
There could be several possibilities for the hum.
1) The sub amp itself might need to be grounded to an external ground. This could be especially true if the sub amp is plugged into a different circuit than the rest of the rig. This would cause a ground differential.The humming is occurring even when I don’t have any components hooked up to the sub and I unplug every socket in the house. I’m renting so I don’t have the luxury of removing the dimmer switches the owner installed. I cracked open the sub yesterday and the hum definitely is coming from the power transformer.
2) If you’re running RCA’s from the preamp to the sub amp, humming might occur if another component patched into the preamp is not grounded correctly.The humming bleeds from the power transformer to the sub cone as soon as I plug in an rca with nothing attached at the other end.
I just remembered that that I made some grounding check rca tools when I made my bottle head crack. I should plug that into the sub.
When end I plug the rca into my pre amp the humming just stays the same (quiet hum in the transformer loud hum in the speaker cone).
3) If the preamp is plugged into a power strip or conditioner that has other components plugged in, then humming might occur if one of those components is not grounded correctly.I’ve tried every combination of plugging and unplugging my gear. It was working fine at my old house before I moved into the new house one month ago. I had the problem as soon as I plugged it into the new house.
4) Bad capacitors in the sub amp.
I checked all the caps when I opened the sub. They were all fine. I have pictures if you would like to see.
5) Loose tie-down bolt clamping down the transformer in the sub amp.It’s a class AB amp Rel T7. The power transformer isn’t toroidal, I want to call it a bell transformer for some reason.
I will check the tie downs. If it’s not that I was hoping I could find something fir under $200 to fix the hum.
To test #2 & #3, just unplug one component at a time. If the problem is a poorly grounded component, the hum should go away.Thank you for all the advice. I’m going to check the transformer tie downs.
To test #5, unplug the sub amp and take off the cover. Tighten any nuts that hold the transformer down. This primarily for older amps.