Music Hall Turntable Hum?


I have a slight hum when I use my phono that increases with volume to the point that when played at loud levels it actually starts feedback with my speaker. I mean bad. System is dead quiet with CD(Music Hall also)I have played ground loop search but think it may actually be something else. Speakers are Def. Tech BP2000 with built in subs and the size of the room and wife dictate the distance I can keep them apart. Are there shielded IC's I could use to prevent the feedback? The MMF5.5 has wall wart plug. Is this EMI? Any help or thoughts would be appreciated. Thanks
Ag insider logo xs@2xhickbone
That I do not know. As I said, I should be Newbee. The Music Hall MMF 5.1 comes with the Goldring 1012GX MM cartridge. Unfortunately, that's the extent of my knowledge. The volume differences between the CD and TT are not that far off. There is some difference, but not enough to think that it's because I really have to crank it on Phono. Could it be a bad ground wire that came with the TT? If I disconnect it it REALLY sounds bad(Hum)Sigh...
Sounds to me like your problem is that your cartridge does not have high enuf output for your phono stage. What is the cartridges output? How much gain does your phono stage have? Your complaint reminds me of someone running a MC cartridge into a MM phono stage.
Thank you Newbee(now I see why I couldn't take that moniker) OK-The hum does increase with volume(stylus off).Can't really hear it at low volumes, but I'd say it "kicks in" around 60% Vol. It then increases notably. It starts as more of a white noise then starts picking up the "hum" as the vol. is increased to around 80% when you can hear it 10' away. With the CD player I can increase the volume to around 90% and not even hear a white noise. Maybe more like air, but no hum. Unpluged the TT and IC's -and no hum from pre. If I take the IC's from the CD player and hook them up to the TT, would that eliminate the IC's from the equation? Don't know where else I can put the TT Thanks again
Well, I don't know when the hum becomes audible relatively speaking, but it strikes me that it might also be nothing more than the noise floor of the phono stage interacting with a cartridge with low enuf gain to cause you to crank it up to get sufficient volume. And, perhaps the more obvious, you are initially hearing the onset of feedback caused by excessive volume as a low level hum. Deep bass creates a lot of air movement, some of it subsonic, and that could be causing the TT/Arm/cartridge to resonate. Check this out by listening for hum increase when the stylus is not in the groove and see if the hum increases with volume.

Hope that helps a bit. Solving problems long distance is a bitch. :-)
Thank You-Disconnecting the ground results in a steady low level hum. Audible throughout. My "hum" isn't really "audible" or bothersome until higher volumes of "more bass" and then it reaches a level and literally reverbs. Can't really move the TT without purchasing longer IC's which is part of my question. My BP 2000's have a built in powered sub and if you use the gain switch on them(increasing the bass levels) it seems to reach that "reverb level" at lesser volumes. I have a sunfire 5 ch. amp and pre/processor and use balanced IC's for all 5 channels, mainly because I had this problem with my previous setup(same TT and speakers different everything else) Mr. Hall says I should move. I am using a Panamax and only one component(amp) has a three prong plug.WTF IS IT? Thanks
Is it possible that you have placed the turntable or the IC's from it to the phono stage near a transformer in an amp or pre-amp or even a DDP. Try moving the TT to another location and see what happens. You might also check to see if the ground wire from the TT is grounded properly. If you think it is, then disconnect the ground and see what happens.