OK, First, thank you to Clark and Molly at Blumenstein Audio. They have been fantastic. From advice on the type of amp, to speaker placement, to just talking me through their offerings. Also, the craftsmanship and service are second to none. I absolutely love my new Orca Deluxe's and Dungeness sub. For me they are a piece or art that will live in my house as long as I do. My only concern now is what am I going to buy from them next. I see some great new products on the horizon. Probably will pick up a second Sub ASAP. Clark is currently working on my amp bases for my Crack, Stereomour, and Submissive in Chocolate Bamboo to match. They system will look sweet when they arrive and I will post some pictures.
BACK to MY QUESTIONS about hum on my Stereomour. I am a big dummy. I figured out that the probes on my Oscilloscope where set to 10X but my scope was set to 1X. After testing on both my scope and my Fluke Meter with the proper settings, i am getting readings of about 1.5 mV after adjusting the Hum pots.
Grainger and all. Is there something to look for that would cause this?
Answers to your questions:
I am sure I am testing AC mV on all the right settings.
I am shorting with RCA Plugs as recommended in one our your posts. (I cut up an old RCA twisted together and soldered.
I do have the hum when using shorting plugs.
Also, I do not get any hum in the sub when it is not connected to the Stereomor. When I connect one speaker side the hum starts, gets louder when second side is connected.
If I adjust the pots with the speakers connected I definitely get to a clear minimum as asked by Paul.
I have looked closely at all solder joints. I have reflowed any suspect joints. I have tested the continuity on all the grounds in the circuit and they seem to be fine.
Could there be a problem with the tubes?
Not sure if I should do anything else or just leave it alone and enjoy the amp/speakers with a slight hum.
Tom