Classic Over-reaction!


So today I was listening to a new vintage LP that had just arrived. And when I switched cables from my phono stage to my Hegel 160 integrated - just to note sonic differences between cables -- I noticed that all of a sudden - for the first time - a noticeable hum was emanating from the Hegel’s transformer.

Crap. What now?

I switched back to the original cables. Nothing. The hum was still there.

I tried different tubes in the phono stage. Nothing. The hum was still there.

I unplugged the Hegel from the wall outlet and plugged it into the power strip. Nothing. The hum was still there. I switched everything off in despair and moped upstairs for dinner.

Where I noticed the toaster oven was on. Hmmm. A few minutes later the toaster oven dinged and turned off and I went downstairs, turned the Hegel on, and the hum was gone.

Sigh....

128x128simao
I had an old Monster digital cable in my box of stuff which was how I finally figured out the cable was the issue.
i read this last nite..
chuckled..
good story..
thought to myself about all those dedicated lines I have..
moved DAC back to rightful place along side preamp today...
...buzz in left channel...
€£¥^[]{}<> !!!!!!!!!

calmed down and found loose XLR out to left amp

sure I bumped it....

ha
The moral of this story is that the audio/video electronics need to be on a dedicated electrical circuit. The dimmers in particular are noise monsters. In most homes, its a lot cheaper to run a dedicated 20amp circuit than buying even a mid-priced AC conditioner.