@ejb14 I am :)
I guess I’d have to get two of these Humdinger units - one for the power amp and one for the rest. Also, the question is how it restricts the dynamics of a power amp.
I have measured the impedance between the ground plug on the inlet and the grounding pin of the chassis (or any screw) - it’s 33.2 ohms.
REF150 - the impedance between the ground on the inlet and any screw on the chassis - 0.01 ohms (0.00-0.02)
Could there be a grounding issue on the AC line? It can, right? And it’s probably quite hard to solve I guess. There’s a dedicated line for the living (listening) room with about 5 sockets around the room. Maybe a lot easier than looking for a ground issue there could be to run another dedicated line that would power the audio stage only. (That would only exclude a router and few lights that don’t really affect anything - I have had them unplugged of course)
Just to be clear - the noise in the REF150 is happening inside the unit - on the transformer and does not affect the sound. Maybe the music gets lean and thin when the buzz gets stronger but that I’m not 100% sure of. Still, it could be another problem, not really related to the noise of the phono stage. The REF150 was a second hand purchase and even tho we listened to it for about an hour and it was fine, something could have gone wrong when plugged directly into the wall.
The noise of the phono stage comes out through the speakers.
Also - one thing I wanted to be sure of - with the use of shorting plugs I should eliminate any signal coming from the air, right? BUT when the chassis is not properly grounded the signal still comes through and gets picked up by the phono stage tubes, is that correct?