Low hum from amp


Hello

I have a low hum coming from my integrated amp.
When I turn up the volume, the hum does not get louder but stays at the same pitch.
Any ideas please as to what's causing this?
Thanks!
greh
greh OP131 posts

03-13-2020
5:42am

My amp is a Manley Stingray.
When I first power it up, the hum isn’t audible until I’m about 30 minutes into listening.

When I first power it up, the hum isn’t audible until I’m about 30 minutes into listening.


That could be caused by a filter cap in the power supply going bad. Does the hum sound like this?
120Hz hum.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pC4Uzt0qm2E

Or does the hum sound like this?
60Hz hum?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SVZ2P0KsLic

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Thanks again everyone for the feedback.
jea48, thank you for the links.
It's 60Hz
Mind you, I can still listen to music because the hum is that soft, but it's still there.
And of course it's more audible when the amp's powered up but there's no music playing.
Post removed 
@ greh OP

If you had said the hum sounded like 120Hz then that would indicate an electrolytic filter cap/s in the DC power supply.

60Hz..... My first thought would be a ground loop hum, except where you said the hum doesn’t start until after 30 minutes after powering up and listening to the amp.
To me a ground loop could care less how long the amp is powered up.

I would suggest you need to first isolate the amp from any front end equipment. Disconnect all ICs from the inputs of the amp. Turn on the amp and listen for the 60Hz hum from power on to after 30 minutes. If no hum the hum is caused by a front end source.

If after 30 minutes the hum starts then it has to be the amp.
You never said the 60Hz hum was only coming from one channel so I assume it is coming from both channels.


I ran across this video that I found interesting. Could the 60Hz hum be caused by a bad small signal tube? Maybe, if the heater/filament voltage is AC.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GrVtX0QGNls   

Jim

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