That is puzzling indeed.
All I can think of is that there is something defective in the preamp, perhaps a capacitor or a tube, that (a)is temperature sensitive, and therefore does not occur until the unit has been operated for some time; and (b)for some reason is not induced by the SF amp, but is induced by the other amps.
Just speculating, but perhaps (b) relates to differences in the manner in which the amps connect (or don't connect) circuit ground to AC safety ground. For diagnosis purposes, you might try temporarily using a cheater plug to isolate the safety ground pin on the power plug of either the preamp or one of the amps that brings out the problem. I'm not envisioning that the problem is a ground loop, since apparently no hum is present, but perhaps something related to how the grounds are handled in the amps other than the SF plays a role in triggering the problem within the preamp.
Regards,
-- Al
All I can think of is that there is something defective in the preamp, perhaps a capacitor or a tube, that (a)is temperature sensitive, and therefore does not occur until the unit has been operated for some time; and (b)for some reason is not induced by the SF amp, but is induced by the other amps.
Just speculating, but perhaps (b) relates to differences in the manner in which the amps connect (or don't connect) circuit ground to AC safety ground. For diagnosis purposes, you might try temporarily using a cheater plug to isolate the safety ground pin on the power plug of either the preamp or one of the amps that brings out the problem. I'm not envisioning that the problem is a ground loop, since apparently no hum is present, but perhaps something related to how the grounds are handled in the amps other than the SF plays a role in triggering the problem within the preamp.
Regards,
-- Al