Well, yes and no. *Some* hum is caused by a ground loop, and *some* hum is caused by DC on the line, and both of these are cured fairly easily. Check out this guide.
https://www.psaudio.com/ps_how/how-to-find-and-fix-hum/
However, there are *plenty* of instances where these fixes and others will not touch the hum. Usually it has to do with the design or quality of manufacture of the transformer, or some strange interaction between the transformer and your AC.
There were a number of reports on the net of Luxman integrateds humming; if it weren't for this I would probably own one right now. It you get this far, it's usually not fixable. Live with it or move on.
See also the discussion somewhere in the thread "ask Ramtubes a question".
https://www.psaudio.com/ps_how/how-to-find-and-fix-hum/
However, there are *plenty* of instances where these fixes and others will not touch the hum. Usually it has to do with the design or quality of manufacture of the transformer, or some strange interaction between the transformer and your AC.
There were a number of reports on the net of Luxman integrateds humming; if it weren't for this I would probably own one right now. It you get this far, it's usually not fixable. Live with it or move on.
See also the discussion somewhere in the thread "ask Ramtubes a question".