Hi.
(Apologies in advance if there's a sticky article I should read on this - I guess it's a very frequently asked question.)
I have a Laney HCM30 amp (schematic) that hums at exactly 100Hz (checked with a guitar tuner app on a tablet). It does this when there is no input connected (and the input path is shorted to ground by the jack socket) and gain and master volume are both at zero. In all other respects the amp works fine.
I have a reasonable knowledge and practical experience of hobbyist-level electronics and so far as I can understand the 100Hz is likely to be related to the full wave rectifier (I'm in the UK, with 50Hz mains power). So one possibility is that the smoothing capacitors are not really doing their job any more and that too much AC ripple is making it to the power amp IC (TDA2030). Visually the capacitors seem fine, with no bulges or leaks apparent (though the bases of them are embedded in a big blob of glue so I can't see all of them). Also the hum disappears instantly when I switch off the power, though the amp continues to run (I can hear the hiss) for a second or so on the charge left in the smoothing capacitors.
So even though the smoothing capacitors have no apparent problems, I'm going to replace them because it's quick, cheap and painless. It may fix the problem or it may clarify that the problem is elsewhere.
My question, therefore, is: are there any other likely causes of the hum that I can investigate and either rule out or fix?
(Apologies in advance if there's a sticky article I should read on this - I guess it's a very frequently asked question.)
I have a Laney HCM30 amp (schematic) that hums at exactly 100Hz (checked with a guitar tuner app on a tablet). It does this when there is no input connected (and the input path is shorted to ground by the jack socket) and gain and master volume are both at zero. In all other respects the amp works fine.
I have a reasonable knowledge and practical experience of hobbyist-level electronics and so far as I can understand the 100Hz is likely to be related to the full wave rectifier (I'm in the UK, with 50Hz mains power). So one possibility is that the smoothing capacitors are not really doing their job any more and that too much AC ripple is making it to the power amp IC (TDA2030). Visually the capacitors seem fine, with no bulges or leaks apparent (though the bases of them are embedded in a big blob of glue so I can't see all of them). Also the hum disappears instantly when I switch off the power, though the amp continues to run (I can hear the hiss) for a second or so on the charge left in the smoothing capacitors.
So even though the smoothing capacitors have no apparent problems, I'm going to replace them because it's quick, cheap and painless. It may fix the problem or it may clarify that the problem is elsewhere.
My question, therefore, is: are there any other likely causes of the hum that I can investigate and either rule out or fix?
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