Norm, A few questions:
When you press your ear to the platter mat, I presume that the platter is not rotating. Correct? (It would be quite a trick to put your ear down on the mat with the platter up to speed.)
The hum: is it a constant or intermittent?
You say the "wall voltage" measures 102-103 VAC. I presume you mean this is at the output side of a 120 to 100V step-down transformer, if you live in the US or any other country with 120V standard. If not, what?
And in connection with the last question, are you sure your TT101 is set up to receive 100V? Most are, but at least a few (mine included) were sold with selectable taps on the power transformer primary such that one can feed the motor with 240, 120, or 100V. Check that the wall voltage and the transformer voltages are copacetic.
When you press your ear to the platter mat, I presume that the platter is not rotating. Correct? (It would be quite a trick to put your ear down on the mat with the platter up to speed.)
The hum: is it a constant or intermittent?
You say the "wall voltage" measures 102-103 VAC. I presume you mean this is at the output side of a 120 to 100V step-down transformer, if you live in the US or any other country with 120V standard. If not, what?
And in connection with the last question, are you sure your TT101 is set up to receive 100V? Most are, but at least a few (mine included) were sold with selectable taps on the power transformer primary such that one can feed the motor with 240, 120, or 100V. Check that the wall voltage and the transformer voltages are copacetic.