Al, would you mind a brief phone chat with me?Thanks, Mark, but my preference is to participate just via the forum. Hope you'll understand.
Also, I'm not sure that I can add anything at this point beyond what I've posted above.
Regards,
-- Al
Phono stage gain setting to match preamp and power amp capabilities
No problem Al, thank you very much for your valuable input so far! I have completely rearranged the rack, components, and cables to move the phono stage as far from any other power supply as possible, and I am being particularly careful to route cables smartly. I'll report what I find when done. Thanks Oscar, I think I will do that eventually as well, start at high gain and work downward. ill report my findings soon. |
So, I moved the entire rack around. Hours of fun! You can see what I did here https://systems.audiogon.com/systems/5421 if you look at the 1st and 2nd photos, you'll see the changes. It doesn't look as pretty as it did before, but perhaps I can refine it a bit. I was super careful to keep the signal cables away from power cables, and I was successful to a very large degree. There is not a single signal cable that touches a single power cable. They get close only once or twice, and even then it is an intersection that does not touch, nothing parallel. I noticed the hum get completely eliminated, probably by separating the phono stage from the amplifiers, thank you Almarg for this suggestion. The hiss is still there, but I do have an older tube preamp, is this just the way it is? Besides, I can no longer hear it at listening position. Is there a way to quiet down the LS-25 a bit more? I am still investigating the right gain setting on the phono stage, I think I will go to maximum, listen, minimum, and listen to define the boundaries, and then find the right point in between. The other bonus to this process was that I think the system is more well defined. Generally better in the detail than it was before. Maybe the phono stage was getting more interference than I thought from the location near the power amp? Maybe I had some power cables messing with the signal cables, either way, it is sounding really good. Now to figure out those gain settings... |
Sounds like good progress! If the remaining hiss varies with the setting of the volume control, as it did previously, the fact that the volume control mechanism is located not far from the "front end" of the preamp’s internal signal path would seem to suggest that the hiss is probably being introduced primarily by either the phono stage or by a ground loop between the phono stage and the preamp. A quick experiment that may be useful would be to disconnect the XLR cable that connects the phono stage to the preamp, and assessing the hiss under that condition. As well as trying the cheater plug experiment I had suggested. Also, try disconnecting power from the DAC and the Mac Mini, to verify that they are not radiating or coupling digital noise into the phono stage or the preamp. Good luck. Regards, -- Al |