Just getting back into vinyl, and seem to be getting a hum that increases in volume as the passive preamp potentiometer is raised in volume. Played with ground wire from turntable to phono amp with no luck, and was trying to see if any of the tonearm wires were bad and can see nothing wrong or loose. Could it be the solid state phono stage and it's power supply? The table is a Well Tempered and the phono stage is the Gram Slee 2 SE. Any help would be appreciated!
I also have a WT which had a pad connection from the cartridge clip to tonearm wire. It looked OK, but poking all four wires behind the cartridge, found the one which was the culprit. Simple re-solder is all that was needed.
try disconnecting your ground wire altogether and see what happens...also, are you using shielded cables? if not, think about investing in a pair. might not fix the problem, but good for rfi, etc.
1.) Gently wiggle all cables - even the power cords. If any of these crackle or pop - could be the source of the problem. Don't crank the gain up when you are doing this or bad things could happen. It is normal to pick up some hum when you put your fingers on the pick- up wires themselves. 2.) Was this exact combination working properly at some past date? For instance - have you substituted a different low output cartridge and are simply hearing the noise floor differnce caused by this? 3.) Most phono sections will hum if you apply enough volume control crank. Does the hum intrude at normal listening levels? Frankly - even old timers such as myself can have problems with playing at higher volume levels - simply because we've gotten used to CD noise thresholds. 4.) If your equipment has three wire gounded AC cords - try lifting these one at a time with "cheaters" - the adapters hadware stores sell to allow you to hook up modern three prong AC cords to older 2 slot only AC sockets. Don't hook anything at all up to the ground loop on the AC adaptor. And yes - your equipment may very well make more noise with the grounds lifted.But you won't know 'till you try. 5.) Have you got any computers or computer devices in the same cabnet the turntable is in? A TIVo for instance. 6.) I hope this last isn't insulting - but I do occasionly run into youngsters who are just starting off into the LP world and have 0 previous experince with turntables. You haven't got your leads from the turntable - the actual tonearm output - anywhere near any AC power cables? 7.) After all - you know the reason it's humming is 'cause it doesn't know the words.
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