Hi Lewm,
Yes, the platter is stationary where the constant hum is travelled up to the platter mat.
I'm in Canada where 117v is standard. I'm using an Elgar 600A power conditioner adjusted to the unit's minimal output voltage setting of 103VAC.
There is a diagram on the TT-101 transformer depicting 100vac as primary and 2 x 16.5vac / 1.2a, and 10.0vac / 1.0a as secondaries.
I've replaced all the capacitors (8 in total) on the PS board in hopes of curing the hum. No luck. However, the speed fluctuation that I was experiencing earlier seem to have disappeared with the new caps.
Following other TOTL DD designs, I've decided to move the xfmr into an external chassis. I'll post my results when this is done.
Yes, the platter is stationary where the constant hum is travelled up to the platter mat.
I'm in Canada where 117v is standard. I'm using an Elgar 600A power conditioner adjusted to the unit's minimal output voltage setting of 103VAC.
There is a diagram on the TT-101 transformer depicting 100vac as primary and 2 x 16.5vac / 1.2a, and 10.0vac / 1.0a as secondaries.
I've replaced all the capacitors (8 in total) on the PS board in hopes of curing the hum. No luck. However, the speed fluctuation that I was experiencing earlier seem to have disappeared with the new caps.
Following other TOTL DD designs, I've decided to move the xfmr into an external chassis. I'll post my results when this is done.