https://www.google.com/search?q=lecson+AC1+preamp&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahU...That’s an Armstrong pre that opens, not a Lecson AC1 as the OP owns.
George,
Click on your link, and then look at this one. I get different preamps.
Cheers George
Mismatched pre/power amps
https://www.google.com/search?q=lecson+AC1+preamp&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahU...That’s an Armstrong pre that opens, not a Lecson AC1 as the OP owns. Cheers George |
On a preamp that is this old, the hum could be coming from capacitors that are degraded and dried out. This is a common root cause of hum on equipment. The degraded capacitors will not filter voltage properly coming in from the A/C mains and you'll get 60hz hum. This can also cause the preamp circuit to not have enough power to provide the gain you need. Hi auxinput I had not thought about that possibility. I had something similar with the AP3 power amp where the circuitry continued to degrade until I had no choice but to retire it. I've read about line drivers which I believe boost the preamp signal. Is this a possibility to see if the circuitry is degrading and preventing the preamp from giving the gain necessary without costing a great deal? Thanks |
You would probably have to have it looked at by an electronic repair person. Replacing electrolytic caps is not usually expensive (maybe up to a couple hundred) unless the device uses specialty caps that cost a lot. You just need to listen to the type of hum. If it's a 60 ha buzz type of him, then it could definitely be caps failing. |