Help With System hum, Please


I have a hum in my system at higher volume between songs at when lower level imformation on a song is being played.It sounds like an amplified sound coming from the speakers.
My phono pre is a Zesto Andros (stock tubes)turntable is a VPI superscoutmaster,cartridge is a dynavector XX2mk11.The cable between the tt and phono stage is an ortofon phono cable and then cardas golden ref going from phono stage to the pre.

I have tried running extra grounds from the TT with no luck.Could the stock tubes be the problem?The tubes are JJ's.Any suggestions would be great as this is driving me crazy.I have eden sound terra stone footers on the TT.

Being new to vinyl, I have another question.Should the stock powercord going from the vpi sds to the outlet and the pc going from the sds to the tt be replaced with after market power cords?I am not sure what to try next to solve this problem.
Thanks in advance
moonguy
Maybe the problem is the noise ratio of your preamp, maybe is a bad solderes cable... There are tooany factors here to check
Do you experience hum playing other source? Does it happen only with vinyl?
Doesn't the Andros have all sorts of grounding options on the back--float, etc? Try those and see.
Regards, Moonguy: You may have a ground loop hum. This will sometimes occur with a metal bodied cart on a metal tonearm.

There MAY be a small grounding strap on one of the cartridge's ground pins, see:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/PICKERING-XV15-CARTRIDGE-WITH-D750-STYLUS-XV-15-/181072853132?pt=US_Record_Player_Turntable_Parts&hash=item2a28c8788c.

In this photo (no association with the seller), the first I could find, it's visible on the blue (left) ground pin. The strap is designed for removal, should this be necessary to eliminate this particular ground loop. A nonconductive isolator between the cart & headshell, with nylon mounting screws will also eliminate this type of hum.

Good luck &

Peace,
Marakanetz,

I've used tube phonostages for 14 years now and the only time it was noisy was when it needed servicing, so except for one month during that whole time did I have any hum.
It is hard to tell from your description if the 'hum' is grounding or something
else. I would try replacing the tubes- I don't know much about JJ tubes but
assuming the unit uses standard 12ax7, 6dj8 or other small tubes, those
are easy enough to get from a reliable source. If it is grounding hum, you
might experiment with the following:
what is the relative placement of your phono stage to the turntable?
sometimes, you can get nasties induced through that. Also, any chance the
phono cable is near an AC cable? Laying out the cables to keep low level
signal cables away from power cables is a good idea.
try some other cables as well if you have them. I assume, using a different
source, like CD or radio, no hum, right?
Also, try a cheater plug on the phono stage, just temporarily, to see if it has
something to do with the way the unit is grounded.
Finally, did this problem just exhibit itself or has it been there since you've
had the unit? (if it just started, it could be a tube. I've also had experiences
where I'll get noise through the system through some extraneous source,
like an appliance elswhere in the house, or somebody doing something on
the 'grid').
Marakanetz- I have owned a couple of very good to excellent tube phono
stages and none of them have been noisy. I did have tube noise through
the phono stage of my old SP 10 mk ii ARC preamp, but that would rank as
a 'vintage' unit these days. Modern phono stages should not be noisy.
I also don't think upgrading the power cords will eliminate the problem you
describe, though they may improve the sound, particularly on the phono
stage. I haven't experimented enough with high end power cords on my
motor controller to say whether that will make a significant enough
improvement to justify the cost over the more modest power cord I am
presently using there.
I find that when this happens, not often, if I just unplug all of the cables and wipe the contacts the hum will disappear for a couple of years. Voodoo? I don't know but it works.
Good luck!

;^)
Postscript- I just took a quick online look- the unit has a ground lift switch, and also has adjustable gain for MC cartridges, so some of the issues might be addressed right there- but you may still have a bad tube or more -is the 'hum' in both channels?
I removed my hum after considerable headaches by plugging my turntable motor/power supply into an outlet outside my listening room.
To answer your questions.The hum has been there since day 1 with my vinyl set up.I never had any problem with my cd player.
I have adjusted the ground switches on the zesto to get the lowest hum, but it is still there.I have kept the phono cable away from pc's.

The turntable is on a shelf right next to the zesto phono stage.I have the turntable plugged into a direct line and the phono stage into an Audience adept response r12 conditioner.

I think I will take the whole system apart and clean connections and try to re route cables better and look at the other sugestions mentioned.I sold the cd player due to liking the sound of the records better, but really need to loose this hum problem.

Gospelcollector,
IMHO tube phonostages need sericing quite often and sometimes from day 1.
I currently run two McIntosh C8's around 57 years old, completely original never serviced before. I bought them last year had them sent directly to DeWick thinking caps would need changed the least and he didn't have to do anything at all, even the tubes tested superb. Dead quiet no hum even at full volume. Sure they weren't used much over the years but six decades later and they sound amazing untouched. I will be upgrading from them for remastering purposes, but they sound better than any SS gear I've heard including Naim.
When I was talking to Jim McShane about quiet 12AX7 tubes for a phono preamp or tube dac and he suggested the Sovtek 12AX7LPS. They are inexpensive relative to other tubes. Maybe try those in place of the JJs after you are done re-done the cabling of your system?
I had a similar situation where only the phono was picking up some electrical line noise; no noise with the CD or the DAC, and I'm using the Zesto as well... I was able to eliminate the noise by adjusting the ground switches on the back. I ended up with one side up and the other down.... Not sure of all the reasons (although I do have an inclination) but was able to eliminate most noise, now it's back to a very quiet tube system, using Cary SL-05 pre and Cary 805AEs for amps.