I have a hum (60hz) I can hear on my speakers and it happens with my tube monoblocks (either of them). With or without interconnects, it even happens on either amp (have tried one at a time) with every circuit on the house tripped/disconnected, every other component disconnected from the wall (including the Internet/CaTV line) and no interconnects.
One amp has it as soon as it warms up whereas the other one is intermittent.
Hum X doesn't solve it, iFi Ground defender either, AVA HumDinger on powerline doesn't solve it either.
I have replaced the tubes and both amps were just tested at the factory. Replaced the circuit breaker, tightened every wire on the breaker box, checked and cleaned all connections to ground rod. Added a hum eliminator to the internet line.
Hum cycles a bit with the tube glow matching the cycles.
I'm waiting on the power company to come check the power coming to the house.
I don't think is the Rocket cable. Try swap the 12ax7 also. I didn't swap my small tubes. just removed the KT88 and put in all 4 KT120. Problem solved. Dead quiet.
The unit was biased and received a complete test. Unit passed all factory specs.
I’m assuming you sent it in, because of this problem? If it came back with a clean bill of health from Manley, it sounds like this problem was not taking place when they had it on the bench, otherwise I’m quite sure Manley would have contacted you about it (yes, no, maybe?).
@dpop I sent it because when I received them they had non OEM inline fuse holders and one was DOA. I spoke with the seller and agreed that they should go to Manley for repairs/return to original configuration and any other repairs.
I paid for checkup and a couple of tubes that had the key broken.
Manley have been great. They have followed the journey on this and offered suggestions. The non conforming tube was brought up by them today/yesterday.
I didn't read every post, just the first half of them. I'm going to say that it's the transformers themselves. I had this problem with my Luxman integrated. It was dead quiet for several years after I bought it, then developed a low hum. It is always the same, comes from the amp, not the speakers, and is independent of any controls or devices. The fix is new transformer(s), which is expensive, and not a guaranteed remedy.
Have you tried connect a different pair of speakers on your Manley Snappers?
Another good point. The manual states: Recommended Speaker Load: Optimized for 5 ohms
Do you know what impedance your speakers are rated ervikingo?
Once the noise starts you can’t bias them as the voltage cycles.
To me, this is the most concerning factor in this whole scenario.
Here’s a few other tidbits from the manual:
-For the power tubes in our amplifiers, after a few years if you notice a small revolt going on where several of the output tubes are misbehaving or getting hard to bias, you might consider doing a full re-tube.
-Three tube types that are electrically and plug-socket compatible with the 12AT7A dual triode include the 6021, 6679, and the ECC81 (I find it a little interesting that they made no mention of a 12AX7 here).
-Never operate the amplifier without a speaker load, or suddenly disconnect the speaker load while the amplifier is producing a signal. This risks punch-through of the enamel insulation covering the transformer’s internal magnet wire. Permanent damage to the output transformer may result
-Additionally, it is best to cut power to the Snapper when not in use rather then leaving the power on indefinitely. This will enhance tube and system life.
Have you tried connect a different pair of speakers on your Manley Snappers?
Another good point. The manual states: Recommended Speaker Load: Optimized for 5 ohms
Do you know what impedance your speakers are rated ervikingo?
Once the noise starts you can’t bias them as the voltage cycles.
To me, this is the most concerning factor in this whole scenario.
Here’s a few other tidbits from the manual:
-For the power tubes in our amplifiers, after a few years if you notice a small revolt going on where several of the output tubes are misbehaving or getting hard to bias, you might consider doing a full re-tube.
-Three tube types that are electrically and plug-socket compatible with the 12AT7A dual triode include the 6021, 6679, and the ECC81 (I find it a little interesting that they made no mention of a 12AX7 here).
-Never operate the amplifier without a speaker load, or suddenly disconnect the speaker load while the amplifier is producing a signal. This risks punch-through of the enamel insulation covering the transformer’s internal magnet wire. Permanent damage to the output transformer may result
-Additionally, it is best to cut power to the Snapper when not in use rather then leaving the power on indefinitely. This will enhance tube and system life.
With the motorboating clue, it would not be unthinkable that those small tubes are involved.
Do these have coupling capacitors?
Something like a broken solder trace could easily be involved to create a situation where the amps is motorboating - maybe even from trying to account for DC.
Here’s some highlights from the jea48 linked Tubes Asylum discussion:
-check the bias as they power up, and let them settle in for a bit (like 20 mins) for a final check.
-do not buy new tubes for hi-fi amps from guitar tube suppliers. Buy them from hi-fi tube dealers. Tubes (even matched quartets) sold by most guitar outlets are specially selected to distort early (low transcoductance tubes), therefore they run out of bias adjustment pretty quickly on a HI-Fi amp and there goes another tube!
-Manley has checked out the amps (one of them twice) and says there isn’t anything wrong with them.
-I have one Snapper that has been back to the shop once. It seems to be holding its own ok in terms of not blowing tubes. The other amp is a different story. It just came home from its second trip to the shop and after two hours of use, blew its B+ fuse and two of the tubes, separating the center post of the two tubes from the tubes themselves.
-Try plugging the monoblocks directly into the wall outlet and check the bias to see if you have better bias stability (bypassing any power conditioners).
-When you pull output tubes in and out on a regular basis, we have a tendency to stretch out the tube pins and even can cause tiny stress cracks on circuit board..Now this leaves you with low bias or intermittent bias or no bias voltage many times therefore causing tubes to burn up. I don’t know how much technical knowledge you have on this kind of stuff, but I would re-solder the tube socket connections and tighten the pins inside the sockets or even replace the sockets with better ones
-Manley’s have not-so-good sockets in them.
-yanking tubes in and out of both amps, he could very well have bad sockets in both or loose solder connections at the very least
-We are rebiasing the amps each time we replace the tubes. We recheck the bias every few hours and the amps have never held bias well. We are terrified of damaging the output transformers, power supplies, speakers, and everything else. My husband and I have been audio enthusiasts for almost 30 years and the hobby is becoming more stressful than fun with the problems we have had with these amps. We have spent many thousands of dollars (money we don’t have) replacing tubes by the octet since we bought the amps, not to mention the shipping back to Manley.
Monday morning update. I couldn't wait for the "good tubes" to come for testing. I ordered one from Amazon (overnight delivery!) and the noise is completely gone. Its scary quiet!
I ordered new 7044 as one of them is not up to par (still some noise). I moved the 12 AT7 from one amp to the other and there was noise on the other amp; moved the 7044 from the quiet amp to the other and the noise is gone.
Huge lessons learned:
- there are a lot of enthusiasts out here who are willing to help
I would strongly suggest you tell the vendor you buy them from you need each section of the Triode tightly, closely, matched. Pay extra for each tube if you have to.
Buy tubes at Upscale they will guide you one step at a time . The tubes from Amazon sellers I bought they did not last except the 6n23 tubes from Caufied guy from California. Grant fidelity sells quality tubes but pricey.
With the motorboating clue, it would not be unthinkable that those small tubes are involved.
@holmzThe 12AX7 has more gain than a 12AT7. This can affect the amount of feedback that exists in the amplifier and can also affect something called 'phase margin'. If the amp was designed to use a lot of feedback and was a bit to close to the limits of its phase margin, by adding the slight extra gain of the 12AX7 it could have pushed the amp over the edge. So an oscillation is entirely possible, simply on account of the 12AX7. This is why it can be so important to use the tube for which the amp is designed.
@atmasphere being a guy in the land of 10k lakes, motor boating should be natural. 😎 (but it’s probably ice fishing season now,)
I was pretty sure that the hum reducer gear, and power conditioning approach, was not likely to lead to a solution… and the amps not having RCAs hooked up precluded a ground loop being possible.
And some version of an Ishikawa chart would have been helpful here.
In any case… it is a great outcome for the OP, and should be useful for others.
My understanding is the two happiest days in the life of a boat owner is the day he buys it and the day he actually is able to sell it. I find bicycles are much easier to manage except for that N+1 thing (N= the number of bikes needed).
I'm anxiously awaiting the delivery of my first tube monoblock amps.
I had a hum issue with my solid state amps, even with all new electric dedicated 20amp lines and audio grade outlets. Thank god a single humX fixed the issue, but I'm kinda nervous about my new amps since I won't be using dedicated and newly run outlets.
I'm probably gonna have new 20amp lines run with audio grade outlets placed once I know where I'm gonna have my amps set up more permanently, but just kinda nervous.
Well see... I'm also probably gonna ask the dealer I bought my amps through to lone me a puritan 156 with ultimate cable to A/B things should there be an issue.
Do the P.S. Audio Power Plants eliminate hum from tube amps? Know first-hand the heartbreak of Tube hum (Prima Luna Prologue Premium w/Klipsch LaScalla II).
Put together any tube amp and the hyper efficient Klipsch Lascalas (or Klipschorn) and that efficiency will dredge the bottom of the amp's circuit mercilessly revealing the slightest hum, Paul Klipsch must not have minded this issue. (Early on he used tube amps until later Crown SS) Admittedly, all is forgiven and forgotten once the music is playing. However, pauses or gaps in the stream of music and HELLO there's the hum again! Being OCD, i.e. today's audiophile, and introduce said hum, and no matter how minuscule it can become deafening. Like most who are in this spot we have applied every tweak possible. And we have had a measure of success. But tube amps use tubes. Tubes are a moving target They are like candles gradually burning out. As a consequence, noise can increase here and there among the family of tubes as they interact with each other. The last couple days, after a month of nearly continuous (nearly) silent operation, no matter what I did, the hum had once again risen above my personal limit. After doing my due diligence and double checking the common culprits, I was defeated. Then on a whim I rotated the power tubes leaving the same but moving the big ones around. Hum GONE! Why is that?
Interesting change in what little "hum" I have left after Raven upgraded the grounding loop system. I just I'm OCD about a totally black background. I rearranged my room where now I sit 3 feet further back from speakers. For some reason I'm now out of reach of a low frequency "hum" that I can reacquire audibly if I lean forward those 3 feet! In the meantime the soundstage and detail etc. are all still excellent. Weird but nicely so. My volume goes up a tad at this increased distance which also helps. (I have an off topic quick question...does anyone know the best DB's on the Lascalas where they produce their best sound? 70? 80? 90?)
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