Hi:
I've been attempting to resolve a hum issue with one of my Paramours. For reference, it's the RHS one. You can walk into the room and hear the hum. The LHS side is really quite quiet - you have to put your ear right up the woofers to hear it. I did check using an online tone generator on my laptop in the room - it's 60 cycle hum.
(For completeness, and in case it helps - these are Paramour I from the spring of 2006. They were "upgraded" twice - the first time with the Edcor output transformers and the MQ BCP-16 plate choke and the Clarity caps. The caps were subsequently replaced. The last upgrade was to the MQ BH-5 output transformer.)
I've read tens (100s?) of postings on this forum and in the old AA one looking for suggestions/hints. As well, I've done a pile of reading on the interwebs w.r.t. hum.
In doing all the troubleshooting things I can think of, I've reflowed solder on all the terminal strips, both the tube sockets, and the C4S PCB. I've moved tubes from side-to-side, replaced 12AT7s, but not 2A3s. Nothing really helped.
I've visually compared the LHS construction with the RHS one. I didn't find anything obvious.
I'm attaching a copy of my voltage worksheet. Most of the voltages I measured seem to be okay to me. But the RHS CS4 output is significantly different from the suggested 155VDC. True the LHS is high, but it's only on the order of 12%. But the problem RHS is pushing 30%. Irrespective of the hum issue, is that a problem? Do I need to fix this?
As a last resort, I poked at the wiring with an orange stick in case there was a wire dressing/routing issue. This was with the input shorted and a speaker connected. I didn't find much until I physically moved the 2A3 cathode resistor and the 50ohm hum pot. Doing that, the hum almost completely went away. I did reflow the solder for the cathode resistor and the hum pot/tube socket.
Based on the Bench article, and the apparent current practice at Bottlehead, my thought is to replace the cement resistors in both sides with a different wire-wound one (not cement). As well, I would replace the hum pot with a 10ohm one and two non-inductive 20ohm wire-wound ones. Other than the space under the hood, is there any reason to not make this change?
The last thing that I've discovered is that I get a fair amount of hum when connecting the Paramour ICs to the powered-down line amp (it's an EFP3). Is this to be expected?
I'm not trying to get to no hum. I understand clearly that with AC "heat" there will always be some residual there. But it would be really nice to get the RHS hum down to the same level as the LHS.
Thank you for any assistance.
Regards,
Barrie.