System feedback coming thru speakers.....help


I just hooked up my system that I have been building for several months and I am getting some feedback out of the speakers. I ended up hooking up a different speaker and it still is doing the same thing. The speakers are all static-ie and the signal seems weak. Here is my system:
Sonograph SA 400 amp
CJ PV 11 with phono
Thorens TD 160 turntable
Hales T 3 speakers
Nakamichi dragon tape deck
Panasonic DVD S 53 as cd source (for now).
Just had a pair of audio quest bi wire speaker cables made today.

Any ideas?
Additional note: I am in a really old house......like late 1800's. Old wiring, two prong, pre grounding even. Could it be:
Line noise?
Cables touching behind my system?

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you in advance!

Jason
jdvorak
All great advice, thx! yes, renting......just moved out of house that we built 6 years ago, so been a bit spoiled on actually 21st century technology, vs. NINETEENTH!!!! :) I have a call into my electrician today to get addressed, either way. Will do further isolation testing tonight as well to see if I can figure this out. so frustrating, but I think you are both on the right track for me. Thank you so much! Jason
Sounds like you have a "cheater plug" between your power strip and outlet. I would get rid of that. You can have a standard grounded 3 prong outlet installed in place of that 2 prong. You would run a "ground leg" from the ground terminal of the new outlet to the steel electrical box via a grounding screw to the threaded hole in the back of that box. Since the cabling is probably BX, it would be self grounded to the main panel box.
I should have mentioned in my previous post- BE SURE to shut off your circuit before doing this or hire a qualified electrician if in doubt.
A 3-prong to 2-prong adapter will probably still provide a ground, if its metal grounding tab or grounding wire is connected to the screw that holds the faceplate of the outlet in place, and provided that the wiring within the walls is enclosed in metal conduit. If you have a multimeter, or a neon-bulb AC tester, you can verify that by checking for the presence of 120 (or so) volts AC between the AC hot pin of the outlet and that ground screw.

From your description of the symptoms, I don't think that AC grounding or feedback have anything to do with the problem. And the fact that it works OK at very low volumes would seem to say that the problem is NOT upstream of the volume control (meaning that it is not being caused by the source component or its interconnect cables, or by preamp circuitry that is ahead of the volume control). Although it would probably be worthwhile to double-check that by trying a different source component, such as the cassette deck.

Some things to consider:

Are you certain that the new biwire cables are connected correctly, and that there are no shorts in the connections or in the cables themselves?

Are you sure that when you heard reasonable sound at low volume settings that you were getting normal stereo separation? It's conceivable to me that a short between channels could produce reasonable sound at low volumes, except that it would be mono, while causing the symptoms you described at higher volumes.

Along the lines of one of Lloyd's comments, but specifically with respect to the power amp, I would consider the possibility that the amp's input jacks may have been dislodged as you were connecting things, such that they lost their connection to the amp's circuit ground.

And, yes, it does seem conceivable to me that a defective tube, or the wrong tube type, or a tube placed in the wrong socket, could account for what you are describing.

Regards,
-- Al
How close is your turntable to the components of your rig & what's the room config. Back in the 70's I had a smallish room & the turntable wasn't isolated enought from the amp/spkrs & perhaps vibration was the culprit & I experienced the same - at least that's what I surmised at the time it & more space & isolation of each piece solved the issue. happy listening!