Al:
I understand what you are pointing out, but higher harmonics of the 60 Hz fundamental will be significantly decreasing in amplidtude as you get to higher orders.
One way to determine this experimentally would be to observe the noise at a given volume setting (of the line amp), then disconnect the interconnects and replace them with (a) shorting plugs or (b) better yet shorting plugs with resistors simulating the source impedance of the phono pre-amp. If the noise levels drop considerably in this test, then perhaps you are right and the increased noise levels are due to ground loops or IC issues. If not, they are simply the thermal noise generated by the various stages of amplification.
Everyone tends to assume that line stage noise is insignificant compared to phono stage noise, but depending on the relative gain (and other issues such as source impedances) this may not always be the case.
Also, one needs to abandon rules of thumb based on the rotational position of gain controls. There is no reference standard here, and the gain vs position is highly product design dependent.
Regarding my spectrum analyzer measurements, I was looking at the spectrum from about 50 Hz- 20k Hz. I did not apply any weighting (A or otherwise) to my measurements as the Tek will not do this (it is a vintage 1980's SA but has a S/N/distortion capability of -130 dB).
I understand what you are pointing out, but higher harmonics of the 60 Hz fundamental will be significantly decreasing in amplidtude as you get to higher orders.
One way to determine this experimentally would be to observe the noise at a given volume setting (of the line amp), then disconnect the interconnects and replace them with (a) shorting plugs or (b) better yet shorting plugs with resistors simulating the source impedance of the phono pre-amp. If the noise levels drop considerably in this test, then perhaps you are right and the increased noise levels are due to ground loops or IC issues. If not, they are simply the thermal noise generated by the various stages of amplification.
Everyone tends to assume that line stage noise is insignificant compared to phono stage noise, but depending on the relative gain (and other issues such as source impedances) this may not always be the case.
Also, one needs to abandon rules of thumb based on the rotational position of gain controls. There is no reference standard here, and the gain vs position is highly product design dependent.
Regarding my spectrum analyzer measurements, I was looking at the spectrum from about 50 Hz- 20k Hz. I did not apply any weighting (A or otherwise) to my measurements as the Tek will not do this (it is a vintage 1980's SA but has a S/N/distortion capability of -130 dB).