I decided to take it one step at a time to try and identify the source of the hum. I have now resoldered everything twice. I tested with three different amplifiers, the BeePre, Quickie and another tube hybrid preamp.
Only the BeePre had about a 20db hum with all three amplifiers and using two different pairs of 300B and three of EL84.
I did further testing where I switched off the power in the house and used my 230V regenerator which has an internal battery to power my dac, beepre and amplifier and this had the same hum. My mains has about 235V so this shouldn't be the issue.
I used both store bought and DIY furutech cables with the shield only at the source end without any difference. There is little to no phone signal in the house and no interference interference as I live in a small village.
The changes I have from stock is: neotech occ 22AWG cable,different power switch, replaced the CAT5 cable with the neotech wire with a braided copper shield, dynamat for vibration dampening. I removed the XLR plugs replacing them with RCA plugs and removing the caps and solder tab. I considered this to be the problem so I put the CAT5 back without any change.
I do have a hum even when the beePre is off and I built something like a faraday cage inside the wood base from fine copper mesh which did fix the hum when it's off but had no effect when it's on.
The resistances all check fine. I do think there might be an error in the manual where A1/B1 and A4/B4 should be reversed. Terminal 1/16 have 4Ω and they are linked with A4/B1 which also has 4Ω but the manual says they should have 5-6Ω.
During my first voltage checks after I just built it I accidentally shorter the 220uF cap at terminals 22,23 for a split second which resulted in a large pop.
Here are my latest voltages:
Terminal Expected Actual
1 5V 5.18V
2 90-110V 99V
3 0V 0V
4 9.85V 9.8V
5 0V 7.2mV
6 146V +/0 1% 145V
7 0v fluctuates between 0mV 40mV
8 0v 0V
9 0v 0V
10 186V 177V
11 146V +/- 1% 145V
12 0V fluctuates between -10mV to 10mV
13 0V 0V
14 0V 0V
15 186V 177V
16 5V 5.09V
17 90-110V 95V
18 0V 0V
19 9.85V 9.82V
20 0V 7.2mV
21 0V 0V
22 213V 203V
23 0V 0V
24 0V 0V
25 213V 204V
26 0V 0V
27 0V 0V
28 0V -47mV
29 6.8V 6.45V
30 6.8V 6.45V
31 13.6V 12.95V
32 0V 0V
33 0V 0V
34 13.6V 12.95V
35 6.8V 6.43V
36 6.8V 6.42V
37 0V -53mv
38 0V 0V
39 0V 0V
40 213V 202V
41 0V -9mV
42 0V -9mV
43 213V 202V
44 0V 0V
45 0V 0V
46 213V 203V
47 N/A N/A
48 0V N/A
49 0V N/A
50 N/A N/A
51 0V N/A
A1 Too riskey to probe
A2 90-110V 98V
A3 0V 0V
A4 Too riskey to probe
B1 Too riskey to probe
B2 90-110V 95V
B3 0V 0V
B4 Too riskey to probe
C1,D1 N/A N/A
C2,D2 0V -5.8mV,-8.9mV
C3,D3 3.5-4.5V 5.1V,4.93V
C4,D4 N/A N/A
C5,D5 N/A N/A
C6,D6 N/A N/A
C7,D7 147V 145V,145V
C8,D8 N/A N/A
C9,D9 147V 145V,144V
The thing that jumps out are all those terminals with a few mV on them. I would have assumed if the cap that I shorted was the problem it would have an effect on only once channel but my hum is equal on both sides.
Any advice?