After a bit of a break I've been sucked back into the DIY audio world and am very excited to see the upgraded Bottlehead forum.
I built a Foreplay (I, II?) sometime around 2001 and used it in my system for quite a long time with a NAD 314 providing amplification. There was always some hum, but not a offensive amount. Then about 2 years ago I decided it would be a good idea to upgrade to gold RCA jacks and the hum suddenly went crazy. The only difference I can think of is that these new RCAs are insulated, so currently the star ground is decoupled from the chassis plate.
(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.blankwhitepage.com%2Fgallery%2Falbums%2Fforeplay_preamp%2FPreamp.jpg&hash=9b580c140b8af60705bab54f15747bba3dad9341)
Additional pictures at:
http://www.blankwhitepage.com/gallery/foreplay_preampThe above pictures are a bit old, here are the current specifications:
- Foreplay from around 2001. I think it is the v1, but could be the v2.
- Anticipation C4S upgrade.
- Pretty sure I added a filament snubber (it was a while ago)
- Insulated RCA jacks
- All silver internal wiring (aka. it was a pain to solder)
- Changed to a "mostly" star ground layout.
With my renewed interest in DIY audio I'd really like to get the Foreplay back into working order and deal with the hum issue. Here's the evidence I have to date.
- Hum is present on both channels and sounds like A/C hum.
- Tubes are significantly microphonic
- Today I noticed that the hum on the right channel decreases significantly in a ~5 degree area of the volume control potentiometer. This seems very strange, the hum is extremely loud, then as the pot is tuned it suddenly reduces and then comes back as the sweeper moves just a short distance.
- Other than the above the hum does not change based on volume setting or input selection.
- I've gone through and checked all the grounds for cold joints.
Here are some things I'm going to try to fix the problem, I'd really appreciate feedback on these and any other suggestions the community may have.
- Tie the DC star ground to the chassis ground. The hum got worse when I installed the insulated RCAs which had the effect of isolating the chassis ground and the DC ground.
- Do additional experimentation with the volume pot to see why the hum reduces when the sweeper is in a ~2mm range.
- Convert to DC heaters. I'm planning to rectify the transformer output, my concern is that this might increase the voltage slightly. Does the polarity of DC voltage to the tube matter?
If none of the above work my next option is to rebuild the pre-amp from scratch, but I'd really like to avoid that step.
Any help or ideas is greatly appreciated. Thanks!
- Matt