Help with buzz / hum that's making me insane r


I've recently realized that there's a very very subtle buzz or hum coming from the dome tweeters of BOTH of my Dali's that's audible if my ears are right next to them. Now before everyone says the tweeters are blown, let me take you through what I've done to analyze the situation (it could also be that I'm crazy):

Hooked up Dali's to a different amp using same front end, still hum
Hooked up different speakers to amp/front end, still hum
Swapped around ICs (I'm running balanced on DAC and Phono), still hum
Rewired system making sure PCs and ICs aren't touching, still hum
Hum is present with both vinyl and digital

The sound is still very, very good, but I can't help feel like on higher register vocals I can hear just a touch of distortion that I wasn't hearing before. Again, this is on both channels, and the sound is great, but vocals and highs have a small touch of rasp. I can't tell if this is me being crazy, because I can hear the hum from the dome tweeters when my ear is right next to them. Any ideas of ways to play around to see what the problem is.

I'm using shunyata PCs for the most part (one cardas) and a Hydra 6 into a Shunyata outlet. Help is greatly appreciated, as this is driving me nuts
mimberman

Showing 2 responses by mapman

Now that the issue is sibilance, I'm wondering if it is associated mainly with the phono and if so also with certain records?

For reference, I detect a sibilance issue most easily by listening to recordings where vocalists, particularly female, pronounce the letter 's'. If the sound is raspy or edgy sounding and not perfectly smooth, then there is sibilance.

Sibilance with the phono is often a result of cartridge misalignment and/or dirt deposits on the stylus (which can be removed easily with a stylus brush) and/or stylus wear or damage.

If it happens with some records and not others, then it is mostly likely record wear or perhaps dirt on those specific records.

If its in the digital source as well, then perhaps there is a loose or poor connection between components or level mismatch issue between components (check component input/out put specs in manuals, if available) or a technical problem within one or more components.

The best way to find a subtle issue like this within a component if it exists is to switch that component in/out of the system with a spare replacement component in good working order, if possible, and see if the issue goes away. Trial and error is involved here.
Sounds like a plan.

Only thing else I can think of to be alert to is some recordings may have natural sibilance baked into them for various reasons relating to the production. Just be certain that the recordings you test with are not naturally sibilant. If its happening consistently from recording to recording, however, this is probably not the case.

Good luck!