Steve nailed it. Grounding is truely a Black Art Light the incense!
In ideal point to "jump grounds", going from the quiet preamp ground to the noisey output stage ground is where the signal is differential. At that point the push pull power tubes can reject the ground noise, it cancels at the output transformer. The power tube grid leak resistors can be "grounded" at either ground without much penality. In fixed biased amps, the bias supply ground performs that function with the added aggravation of the rectifier currents. Probably best to keep those currents with the power stage ground and not pass them between grounds.
mbratch: 60Hz hums usually come from lead dress or heater supply issues. 120Hz buzz type hums are usually ground related. Try a hum-balance control and/or elevating the heater supply.
In ideal point to "jump grounds", going from the quiet preamp ground to the noisey output stage ground is where the signal is differential. At that point the push pull power tubes can reject the ground noise, it cancels at the output transformer. The power tube grid leak resistors can be "grounded" at either ground without much penality. In fixed biased amps, the bias supply ground performs that function with the added aggravation of the rectifier currents. Probably best to keep those currents with the power stage ground and not pass them between grounds.
mbratch: 60Hz hums usually come from lead dress or heater supply issues. 120Hz buzz type hums are usually ground related. Try a hum-balance control and/or elevating the heater supply.
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