Tbg,
Thanks for responding to my post too.
I believe the culprit is the Muse Model 18, but it seems to work fine when the Klyne preamp and Musical Fidelity CD player are used instead of the Sony DVD player and the Proceed AVP.
1. Disconnect everything except the amp to speaker wires. Put shorting plugs into your main amp and turn it on. If you have no hum, the culprit is not the amp.
The main amp (Proceed AMP 5) does not hum, and it worked fine until the Muse Model 18 was plugged into the system.
2. Connect the preamp to the amp after removing the shorting plugs. Turn the preamp on and then the amp. If you have no hum, neither are culprits.
The Proceed AVP preamp also worked fine until the Muse Model 18 was plugged into the system.
3. Plug in one front-end device. If you have no hum, with it active, it is not the culprit.
The front-end device (Sony DVD player) also worked fine before the Muse was inserted. This leads me to believe that the Muse may be on another circuit from the other equipment and is, therefore, creating a situation in which there are multiple grounds.
4. When you add something that causes hum, it is the culprit. It is possible that it is that unit's interconnects, so try others. Also it may be the only grounded front-end device. Try a cheater plug. If the hum does not go away, try reversing the cheater. If none of this works, you have a problem with that device.
Using another set of interconnects is not an option. I am using two 12-foot pairs of Transparent Audio MusicLink Plus ICs that cost me $1,200. I can try reversing the cheater plug that I am using on the Muse to see if that suggestion works. Prior to installing the Muse Model 18 in my system, I had sent it back to the factory to be completely checked out. It was given a clean bill of health.
You might also find that grounding the unit to the amp may cause the hum to go away. Also a resister on the ground may solve the problem.
How do I ground a component to the main amp and how do I place a resister on the ground?
Thanks