I'm the repair guy for the next couple of weeks while Kelvin studies for finals.
Yesterday he had a Seductor come back that he had repaired a few weeks ago. The issue was hum in one channel. Turned out to be a 6AU6 tube, which was determined by swapping tubes from side to side. We sent it back with a fresh, tested tube. Then we cooked the offending tube in overnight in our house Seductor and today it's nice and quiet.
This afternoon I had a Crack on the bench. The complaint was hum in both channels. As always, the first thing I did was wiggle the tubes in the socket. This created a lot of noise with the hum cutting in and out. Reflowing all the joints fixed the problem, which appears to have been a cold solder joint at pin B2.
A third repair, one channel out on a Stereomour II, took some sleuthing with a scope and required the replacement of a transistor that had blown due to intermittent connections.
Just want to point out that fairly often (two out of three cases here) the repair we do is something we explain how to DIY in the troubleshooting section of the assembly manual. It may be worth trying to reflow all the joints and to let the tubes run in for 50 or 100 hours before giving up on a hum problem.