Moving Carl's problem from Rebbi's thread. There is editing and combining of posts:
Hello,
I have a very similar problem to the one described [by rebbi]. My issue is the buzz occurs or is noticeable only when I have the volume turned high. I have always had to open the volume on the Foreplay to 3 0'clock if not all the way, which is about 5 o'clock when using the Turntable.
I noticed that with no record playing or the motor on, if I lift and rotate the tonearm towards the center of the table (as if to play a record) the buzz gets significantly louder. Any ideas how to approach identifying and fixing this issue? [this resolved below] . . .
Another post:
I'm using a Clearaudio "Emotion" table. There is a ground wire running from the tonearm and another ground running out from under the center spindle. On a hunch I decided to remove the one wire under the center spindle but kept the one from the tonearm attached to the Seduction ground post. MAJOR improvement!!! Hum subsided about 50-75% from where it was before. Also, there is now little or no reaction when I move the arm towards the platter. Am I on the right track? Seems so but I want some more feedback and thoughts if possible. Why is there a ground off this center spindle to begin with? It's not attached to the tonearm or motor so why would it need to be grounded?
I've been living with this issue for years and just now addressing....go figure : )
Another post:
I'm now only able to discern a hum (sorta microphonic sounding) when at the highest setting on my Foreplay (without music playing). There is no difference when the motor is either on or off. I detect only the slightest change in hum now when i move the tonearm towards the center (i.e. closer to to the motor which is in the back left corner of the table). Only grounding now has the tonearm to the Seduction.....is this incorrect meaning I still need the grounding I removed from the center spindle?
When you say silent should it be the same silence I hear when set to a cd player without any music playing? because I have not achieved this quite yet.
Thanks,
Carl
So far Carl has removed the ground from the center spindle to the Seduction and it reduces hum a lot. That isn't an issue, leave it that way.
Carl reports that the hum no longer increases as the arm moves toward the center/motor. There is no difference in noise with the motor on or off.
The Seduction and TT are on one dedicated outlet and Foreplay and Dynaco [we should find out what model] on another dedicated outlet.
The noise is only audible from the listening position when no music is playing.
The ground lug on the Seduction is properly attached to the Seduction top plate.
The TT AC plug is grounded and attaches to the motor/switch only, it doesn't even touch the table. So there is no connection between the TT motor and AC and the TT.
I mentioned this about the two dedicated outlets:
If the two outlets are from opposite phases of your incoming power it can produce noise. (In my service panel the breakers on each side of the panel are on alternating phases. That means if they are above and below each other they are probably on opposite phases.) Try an outlet strip on the same dedicated outlet as the rest of the system. If indeed the second outlet is on the opposite phase of the incoming power then it would be great isolation for all digital devices. That is what I have done in my system for analog and digital devices.
A couple of questions still need to be answered:
Have you tried different a different TT, tubes, interconnects, a separate ground wire?
You say you have buzz rather than hum. That can be a power supply noise. If you haven't had the noise before try rewetting the solder joints on the diodes.
Paul Joppa asked: OK, if touching the tonearm increases hum, and if the tonearm is properly grounded to the Seduction chassis, then it's logical that touching the Seduction chassis would increase hum. Does it?