Hello Kgturner,
I doubt it if the hum is cause by a tube. Do you have a scope? I ask because you can measure what freq your hum is. 60 hertz and it could be mechanical (tube or transformers vibrating) or filament supply voltage, 120 Hz. and it surely is coming from the rectified voltage of the B+. So which one is it and how much is the amplitude?
One thing to try is to have a shielded cable(shield connected at the preamp side only)from amp to preamp. Try it reverse also and see what happens.
regards,
Abe
I doubt it if the hum is cause by a tube. Do you have a scope? I ask because you can measure what freq your hum is. 60 hertz and it could be mechanical (tube or transformers vibrating) or filament supply voltage, 120 Hz. and it surely is coming from the rectified voltage of the B+. So which one is it and how much is the amplitude?
One thing to try is to have a shielded cable(shield connected at the preamp side only)from amp to preamp. Try it reverse also and see what happens.
regards,
Abe