Originally posted by LamontGrady
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I had this problem and is ground related. I dd several things to eliminate the 50/60hz hum.
1. Connect the ground on the preamp as close to the input jacks as possible using a good bolt with start washers and 1/4 inch ring terminals squeezed and soldered. This was the biggest difference in the hum and eliminated it but I took the following steps also.
2. Make sure and even replace the input jacks since the jacks can become resistive and have a poor ground contact.
3. I also had a problem with V1 when removed solved the hum issue. I soldered 2 100ohm resistors to the heater pins and connected with a bolt and ring terminals to chassis.
4. Check the center tap connections coming from the heater coil from the transformer and make sure this is connected very tight. This should go to the main star ground.
Now I can dime my master and preamp an no hum whatsoever.
5. Some crappy preamp tubes can be noisy also, these need to be run and burned in to make sure they are noise free once burned in.
6. I do not like the 22nF caps in this circuit on the preamp. I use on V1A .0047uF and V1B .01uF. Caps also need some burn in time.
7. I got rid of the cascaded input section and changed this by adding another 1 meg gain pot and eliminated the voltage divider 470K/470K. I separated the 2 gain stages and can adjust them both to blend very good tones.
8. I also on V1B used a 270K with a 500PF bypass cap and V1A is 470K with 500pF bypass cap. The 270K is same as the old bassman values and has an extremely good tone. This can also be 330K/500pF. This smoothed out the tone dramatically when using pedals. The distorsion is much more clear and I like the dynamics and is more usable in club scenes.
9. On V1A cathode I use a 4.7K/220uF setup and is very good tone. V1A plate voltage 251V and is a perfect point on tone and not too aggressive at 1-2 O-clock gain knob but can be at 3 O-clock etc.
10. Bright cap on V1B is 200pF and resistor is 220K. Not too bright and usable. Dont have to use 500pF/470K bright cap resistor values. You can start with 100pF-200pF and on to get what you like. I left the 68K resistor in place on V1, both sides and this combo works out great. Treble knob at 1 O-clock is fine and linear and more usable.
10. On V1B cathode this can be from 1.5-2.7K bypass 68uF.
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