No, this is not what I'm saying. You are trying to reduce a specific source of noise in the Stereomour that may be -10 to -20dB below the noise floor of the 2A3 itself. If it isn't visible/audible to begin with, there's not way to measure your success at reducing it (if it is there at all for that matter).
[Preface: I drafted a response yesterday, but must have failed to hit "post" b/c it has disappeared into the ether. I just noticed this.]
Thanks PB. I misunderstood (again). So you're saying that the effect, if it exists, of any EMI coming from components within the amp on the signal may be so minute that they're buried in the noise floor of the amp, and therefore may not be measurable. And so any changes brought about by shielding experiments may also be non-measurable. That makes sense.
I will try taking measurements just to see what I can see. And, subject to what I read in the article that Jamie linked to, I think I will play around with shielding the signal wire in a few spots. First target: the run from the rca inputs to the first attenuator. When I assembled the SII I noticed the care that had been taken to keep this run shielded and pushed as close to the outer edge and as far from the OT as possible. I also noted that in the pic of the Neothoriator innards, some copper tubing encases some long signal wire runs that pass close to what look to me like OTs - so maybe there's something to be had by adding some additional shielding. Don't know - and if I can't measure it, I'll be left with my hearing -- but that can't really be trusted because I will know I made a change and my mind may fabricate a perceived difference in sound.
@Doc B: I've read elsewhere on the forum that you've experimented with shielding quite a bit, so I'm hoping you may know off the top of your head the answer to a question I posed over the weekend regarding the construction of "zero gauss" chambers - typically 3 concentric, separated layers of mumetal or similar: to get the added shileding benefits of multiple concentric layers, is it sufficient to separate the mumetal layers with copper conductive adhesive foil (mu-m, cu, mu-m, cu, mu-m)? Or is it a requirement that the mu-m be separated by either an air gap or a non-conductive material?
The shielding for the signal wire I have in mind will be open-ended, so not true "zero gauss" chambers. All I'm after is some of the additive shielding benefits of separated layers of mumetal - if feasible. I don't think I could make a cylinder of air-gapped layers of mumetal small enough to put around the signal wire. But layers separated by copper tape or a non-conductive thin plastic is probably doable.
Later on I may look at different ways of shielding the tubes themselves. I read yesterday in Vol 1 1999 of Valve that "Buddha" shielded radio tubes by soldering copper sheet tightly wrapped around the lower 2/3s or so of tubes! And then grounding the shield. I will not go so far (I fear damaging the tube). Instead, I may make so some fairly wide and open copper cans, half the height of the tubes, that leave a good inch or more of air gap between the shield and the tube -- just to shield against anything passing to/from the tubes and the amp's innards below. For shielding the tubes from any stuff that may be coming from above, I think it would simpler to affix a sheet of copper to the the underside of the shelf directly above the amp.
[Aside: I realize that this may be crazy, but after I clad my SII in copper I swear the sound changed. And at that time I hadn't even thought of the "shielding" issue and wasn't expecting any sonic change - I just wanted a real copper encased amp because I like the looks of copper and I think it is representative of the incredible sound that the SII produces. But after letting the newly cladded amp warm up, I instantly thought I'd broken something b/c it sounded "off". But as I listened more, I concluded that it wasn't off, it was just different: the soundstage was smaller (not a plus for me), but there was better detail in the higher frequencies - I heard a few new details in music I am familiar with. That said, the amp is still breaking in, so it may just be coincidence - or I am imagining it. Dunno. It also occurred to me that the copper cladding, while it might be shielding the amp's innards from some EMI from the outside, might also be inwardly reflecting back EMI produced by the amp - I have no idea as I don't yet understand the nature of magnetic flux and other possible sources of radiated noise, or how copper shielding interacts with them. All of which is to say: I am aware that "shielding" could possibly worsen the sound of the amp. But nothing I'm doing is irreversible. After another month of burn-in, I will experiment with taking the cladding off - it can be removed without damaging it]
cheers and thanks,
Derek