What is an acceptable level of transformer hum on a Krell S300i?


Greetings from a newbie. Just a quick intro:
  
Not rich, but I've been into hi-fi since college (Dual CS506 era). 20 years ago, I had progressed to Michell Gyrodec/Rega, Roksan Caspian CD/bi-amp, Sonus Faber Concertos.

The speakers never sounded as good as when the dealer had demo'd them hooked up to a Krell KAV 400i. But this was not a pressing issue as everything went into storage while I went travelling/working overseas.

Fast forward to present day. My brother has just got into vinyl (having discovered a killer high end McIntosh set up while staying at an Air B'n'B), so I unboxed my kit and set it up to show him what he should be listening to.

We both felt the sound was disappointing and my thoughts returned to that Krell demonstation 20 years earlier. My focus then wandered to eBay and I found myself winning the bidding on a S300i amp.

It is in excellent condition but it hums, even when in standby and without speakers or sources connected. I have tried different locations around the house, different houses, cheap mains cleaners and 3 into 2 mains plugs to eliminate the earth. Nothing makes any difference. When I press the mains switch on the back, the amp starts with a 'cough' which settles down to a constant hum after 2 seconds. I think it is higher than 50/60hz. Possibly closer to 200 hz. It does not vary at all after that. I convinced that this is the transformer because it also occurs in standby without any connections.

If the amp is on the floor and I stand next to it, I can hear the hum.   At 15 feet away, I can't really hear it, but with it in the rack and in my seating position, my ear is only 5-6 ft away and it is clearly audible when the room is quiet. It is annoying when reading in silence to the point that I need to disconnect the power.

My question to you... is this an acceptable level of hum? I would have expected that unless I put my ear next to the casing, I would not be able to hear anything. I have hunted the forums and web but can't find an answer for this specific issue. I use Transparent cables but these aren't relevant because it hums without any cables connected.

Your comments/thoughts will be greatly appreciated. I have already raised this issue with the seller who claims that it did not hum when he sold it. If the hum was really loud, there would obviously be a problem with amp. It is at a level that I can't be sure about without anything to compare it to.

Kind regards. 

rickx
If the hum appears to be greater than 60 hz and floating the ground does not help, it could very well be the power supply capacitors need replacing.
Are you using RCA inputs or XLR inputs into your Krell? If using RCA , then “shorting pins” may be required on the XLR inputs. I had this happen to me on an old KAV250a amp. I was getting a terrible hum until jumpers were installed. I remember emailing Krell about this and not only did they explain this to me but they sent the jumpers gratus  . 
You can forget EBay. I had a similar “case” and I could never get a cent. There are all sorts of outs for the experienced criminal on EBay.
You could well be correct on the xlr shorting pins, in fact if I remember right Krell suggests to not even use single ended if the shorting pins are not in,place. This was true on,older amps, not sure if the newer stuff is up to the same requirements.

And I am afraid I must respectfully disagree on eBay. Only way you would really lose money is if you were not in the right or did not read the description correctly.
After 19 years of eBay and multi 1000 feedback I might just know a thing or two there.......
So this is definitely mechanical hum. It is unlikely to be a ground loop, but it could be DC on the line, but testing this in a different home eliminates that.

Have you pressed your hand on the case? Is it something you can damp, or is it all sounding from the transformer?

Having the rectifier and caps checked out is not a bad idea, but I am afraid you may have a bad transformer, with only one, very expensive fix. :(

Erik