Hello Spencer,
I see. On normal usage, is the charger connected directly to the preamp all the time or you have to disconnect after charging?
If it is the latter, then it should be quiet because it uses the main amp ground, through the negative pins of the output RCA's as the ground point. This is akin to having a star ground connection that goes back to the ground of the main amp power cord ground. If it is the former, then I would like to ask you if the charger have a three prong or a two prong ac plug? Have you tried with or without the charger, if possible?
If after trying all those plus the ones you already tried, the hum still persist, the only think you need to try is to have a ground loop isolator between the amp and the preamp before resulting to troubleshooting the connections for hum loops inside the preamp. I believe the preamp is your problem.
To understand how the isolator works, you can read it here http://www.jensen-transformers.com/an/an004.pdf
I hope this helps.
I see. On normal usage, is the charger connected directly to the preamp all the time or you have to disconnect after charging?
If it is the latter, then it should be quiet because it uses the main amp ground, through the negative pins of the output RCA's as the ground point. This is akin to having a star ground connection that goes back to the ground of the main amp power cord ground. If it is the former, then I would like to ask you if the charger have a three prong or a two prong ac plug? Have you tried with or without the charger, if possible?
If after trying all those plus the ones you already tried, the hum still persist, the only think you need to try is to have a ground loop isolator between the amp and the preamp before resulting to troubleshooting the connections for hum loops inside the preamp. I believe the preamp is your problem.
To understand how the isolator works, you can read it here http://www.jensen-transformers.com/an/an004.pdf
I hope this helps.