Hi Bruce,
I doubt that ambient sounds or 60 Hz coupling have anything to do with the problem, although experimenting with the turntable ground, as was suggested above, would seem to be worthwhile. Perhaps even trying having no ground connection to the preamp. Obviously, have the system turned off while you are making any of those changes, and have the volume control turned down when you initially power up.
Regarding ambient sounds, as I indicated in my first post in the thread I linked to earlier:
Best,
-- Al
I doubt that ambient sounds or 60 Hz coupling have anything to do with the problem, although experimenting with the turntable ground, as was suggested above, would seem to be worthwhile. Perhaps even trying having no ground connection to the preamp. Obviously, have the system turned off while you are making any of those changes, and have the volume control turned down when you initially power up.
Regarding ambient sounds, as I indicated in my first post in the thread I linked to earlier:
A high gain feedback loop that is unstable at some frequency or frequencies does not require much if any input stimulus for oscillations to occur.... So what is probably happening is that some extremely tiny (and inevitable) low frequency vibration causes the cartridge to output a tiny signal, which is amplified by a high gain factor, resulting in an output from the nearby speaker that causes further vibration to be mechanically transmitted to the cartridge, which is further amplified by that high gain factor, etc., etc. The root cause of the problem is that the overall loop is unstable at some low frequency or frequencies, when the overall gain through the loop is above a certain amount.The only suggestion that occurs to me at this point, besides the grounding experiment, is to continue to experiment with turntable placement, and the related suggestions the others provided above.
Best,
-- Al