My 1st tube amp: transformer buzz audible 15 feet?


I recently purchased my first tube integrated amplifier from a local shop. I continue to have problems with a buzz coming from the transformer, which I can easily hear while 15 feet away. Is this normal? Do I have a defective unit?

So far, the transformer cover has been tighten by the shop, and I plugged it into a variac to bring the voltage down from the 120-122 volts coming from my outlets.

After two weeks, I find the buzz unacceptable. Any ideas?
jackpage
I tried two other wall outlets and there was no change, so I don't think it is the polarity.

Previously I did have the identical model demo unit at home, and I could hear it but only up to about 4 feet. Mine is significantly louder. My desk is is centered behind the sweet spot seating, and I can hear it from the desk, with my ears 17 feet (I measured) from the amplifier.
This is NOT normal. Return it and get a full refund.

This is not acceptable and is ridiculous for them to tell you anything otherwise.

There are plenty of other integrated tube amps that will NOT give any transformer hum.
Return it NOW. The other thing to check is a loose tube socket. Touch the tubes with a wooden stick and see if one of them is resonating. If so, a socket may be loose. If so, then you return it. Either way, return it. The transformer is just a buzzer, get rid of it. The goal is less noise, not more. If they don't have better quality control, change brands. Jallen
What is your amp sitting on? I had a similar problem with a more or less new RM-10. It was my first tube amp as well and I could hear it 10 feet away. I had it sitting directly on a piece of ply on spikes on a rug over concrete. I believe it was resonating with the ply and amplifying the existing hum--and it was annoying as hell. I happened to have some herbies tenderfoots I wasn't using so on a whim I stuck them underneath the amp. Problem solved. I can still hear the same hum if I stick my ears right up to the amp but it's no longer audible from my seating position or even 2 feet out. Nothing magical about the tenderfoots, because I switched them out (tonight as a matter of fact) with some audio technica footers I have and same result: quiet. Try it ASAP. I suppose trying a different platform might work as well.

If it doesn't work then, as most everyone has said (and obviously correctly), return it.
It sounds like a defective transformer. Is this unit new? Who makes this unit? A mild buzz is not uncommon in a unit that's a few years old.