Your hiss and hum levels are "normal" for that kind of amp, *BUT*
1) your camera audio system is heavily compressing all the time, to catch everything from a roar close up to a whisper 20 ft away, so when you record something in a silent room hiss and hum "look" 10X as loud as they would for anybody present there.
So it's not as bad as it sounds in your video.
2) your amp, which was not designed as a high gain amp to begin with, has an extra gain boost added, either an extra gain stage or some NFB killer.
Both will "increase" hiss and hum big way.
You'll have to live with that, unless you are ready to spend 3X the amp cost with a Boutique Tech who will rewire it, elevate filament voltages, reorient the reverb tank, replace caps and resistors, select tubes, all the tricks in the trade, to optimize it.
Personally I'd avoid using that added gain boost and instead add a clean boost (Think MXR clean boost) ahead of the amp.
Once your signal has mixed with hum and hiss at V1, not even the Devil will separate them.
1) your camera audio system is heavily compressing all the time, to catch everything from a roar close up to a whisper 20 ft away, so when you record something in a silent room hiss and hum "look" 10X as loud as they would for anybody present there.
So it's not as bad as it sounds in your video.
2) your amp, which was not designed as a high gain amp to begin with, has an extra gain boost added, either an extra gain stage or some NFB killer.
Both will "increase" hiss and hum big way.
You'll have to live with that, unless you are ready to spend 3X the amp cost with a Boutique Tech who will rewire it, elevate filament voltages, reorient the reverb tank, replace caps and resistors, select tubes, all the tricks in the trade, to optimize it.
Personally I'd avoid using that added gain boost and instead add a clean boost (Think MXR clean boost) ahead of the amp.
Once your signal has mixed with hum and hiss at V1, not even the Devil will separate them.
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