RY
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So interesting… and SOME PROGRESS!
… SO… I was restocking to add some vibration absorption below my rack, and I took the opportunity to experiment with the hum issue.
First: I unplugged all of my components besides my amp. I unplugged all inputs. The hum continued.
Next: I moved my amp to the middle my room, and reconnected my speakers. No inputs. Nothing around it. Hooked up power to the amp, and the hum is even between the speakers and low in db! It measured 44 db (which is great and barely audible at my seat) on BOTH speakers, at 60 hz!
SO…. Something about the amp on the rack in the corner of my room. When restocking, I paid special attention to what I thought could cause any EMF interference. I moved my router to the opposite corner (as it was previously a foot away from the left channel on the amp), moving the router had no effect on the hum. I moved the LED lamp that is made of metal and also near the amp. No effect on the hum. Moving the WiFi router and moving the LED lamp had no effect on the hum when the amp was placed again on my stack in the corner of the room… !
SO… what is it about the amp in this location that causes a hum to be 6-10db more pronounced in my left channel only?
I had previously switched my speaker cables Left - Right, and the hum followed the left channel of the amp to my right speaker. So its something seemingly interfering with just my left channel on the amp when it is in the corner on my rack… Some thoughts:
-The rats nest of cables behind the stack? I rerouted the power cord for the amp only, as far away as possible from the rats nest of cables. No effect.
-The power strip that is behind the rack, that serves only to power my turntable motor and my iPad charger? I disconnect this power strip, no change.
-The electric Piano, which is 4’ away? It still present at that distance when I moved the amp to the center of the room and the hum reduced significantly.
-The coil of anticable that is behind my right speaker? Both speakers have 12’ of anticable, so the right one is coiled up a little near the left speaker input on the amp. I rerout the cable far away, no change.
-The Palm Plant??!! I move the plant…! It laughs at me! No change in hum….
-Could it be something about the physical stack? -Could it be something about the proximity to the dedicated outlets I installed? They are right behind the amp, but nearer the right channel and not the left…. -Could it be the composition of the walls themselves? The house is 100 years old, and I believe there is wood slat with plaster… could there be a metal mesh in this old wall type?
Is there some way I can insulate the amp from any of this interference?
What else could it be????
THANK YOU ALL FOR YOUR ADVICE! The mysticism of this alchemy….
R,
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