Abill:
Could be the motor of your tt is putting out enough EM for the cartridge to be picking it up. Might be good to know what turntable and cartridge you have. There are certain cartridges that are known to be susceptible to this.
On the other hand, it could also be that the phono stage of your pre-amp is the issue, or the pre-amp itself is the source.
So, how to isolate?
One idea would be to borrow a phono pre-amp and then plug that into a line level input of your pre. If the hum is still there when you lower the arm, then you could rule out the internal phono stage, meaning it's either the table or somehwere else in the pre.
You might also try lowering the arm onto the record with the tt powered off and/or unplugged, but still using the pre-amp's phono stage. If you turn it up and still get the feedback, the indication is the pre-amp. If it's gone when the t/t is unplugged, then I'd suspect a motor/cartridge interaction. Good luck with the testing.
Could be the motor of your tt is putting out enough EM for the cartridge to be picking it up. Might be good to know what turntable and cartridge you have. There are certain cartridges that are known to be susceptible to this.
On the other hand, it could also be that the phono stage of your pre-amp is the issue, or the pre-amp itself is the source.
So, how to isolate?
One idea would be to borrow a phono pre-amp and then plug that into a line level input of your pre. If the hum is still there when you lower the arm, then you could rule out the internal phono stage, meaning it's either the table or somehwere else in the pre.
You might also try lowering the arm onto the record with the tt powered off and/or unplugged, but still using the pre-amp's phono stage. If you turn it up and still get the feedback, the indication is the pre-amp. If it's gone when the t/t is unplugged, then I'd suspect a motor/cartridge interaction. Good luck with the testing.