Hello. Have a box with tens of nos Russian 6n9s, 6sl7 equivalent. I tried to make a simple preamp but get a lot of hum. I didn't identified a loop in the ground. The ac heaters wiring is proper done. In order I tried to shield the tube with a steel cage but no noise difference. Elevating the heaters to 80v makes no difference. Supplied the heaters from DC source makes the hum a continuous highest pitch tone. I.m off ...the circuit is as simple as the sketch show. I tried a new production tung sol 6sl7 and is far more quiet but have same comportment. The tubes I tested are absolutely new and measure well from different lots from '66 to '75. Is clear I did something wrong but I don't get it...Any help please ? Thanks.
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Help to get rid of hum please.
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Originally posted by mozz View PostBypass the first cathode."If it measures good and sounds bad, it is bad. If it measures bad and sounds good, you are measuring the wrong things."
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50 cycle hum seems heaters modulation. As I said elevated voltage with ca.80v positive not did any difference. I tied at the end of rail a bridge and an 1000uF over to DC supply the tube heaters and get same amount of hum at high frequency... the picture looks weird...why it modulate only half of cycle...? 50mV of noise is a lot of noise..."If it measures good and sounds bad, it is bad. If it measures bad and sounds good, you are measuring the wrong things."
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostObviously the fundamental is 50Hz, but looks unusual.
Is this with standard AC heater wiring?
How does the AC ripple on the supply rail look?
this is the supply node:
And this is v1 plate
Standard AC heater wiring ."If it measures good and sounds bad, it is bad. If it measures bad and sounds good, you are measuring the wrong things."
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostI guess you mean the input triode.
What do you see at the plate when you ground the grid?
BTW, I don't see a grid leak resistor."If it measures good and sounds bad, it is bad. If it measures bad and sounds good, you are measuring the wrong things."
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostDirectly connect the grid to the grounded end of the cathode resistor using a short wire."If it measures good and sounds bad, it is bad. If it measures bad and sounds good, you are measuring the wrong things."
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