finishing up this 5150 style custom build, and all the voltages are just where i want them to be. the only issue is, there's a loud hum/buzz from the DC preamp heaters, that ONLY comes in only when i crank the primary voltage up past about 100VAC.
the heater circuit is attached. power tubes (2x KT90) are fed from 6.3VAC, and preamp tubes (5x 12AX7) from the 6.3VDC at the filter cap terminals.
with <100VAC primary voltage at the input of the power transformer, everything's hunky dory - both the AC and DC heater supplies are at roughly +2.5V/-2.5V and perfectly balanced, noise floor is nice and low, no perceptible hum or buzz even when the controls are cranked, just a normal amount of hiss/white noise.
however, when i turn up the primary voltage more, the AC heaters stay perfectly balanced, and the total DC voltage between the terminals stays about the same as the AC... but the DC develops a bad imbalance which creates a loud hum/buzz throughout the preamp. the negative voltage stays at around -2.5VDC, and only the positive voltage continues to increase as the primary voltage is increased. with one multimeter probe to ground, probing the positive terminal with the other slightly improves the hum/buzz, or at lower voltages where the hum/buzz isn't too loud yet, can completely erase it... and probing the negative terminal makes it worse, which is the only part of this that makes sense to me lol.
any ideas? i'm a bit at a loss. triple checked my wiring and solder joints, chopsticked it, re-tested the tubes, replaced the fuse... i definitely don't have more than one heater ground reference... since the AC side stays perfectly balanced all the way up to 125VAC on the primary, i would think it has to be an issue with the rectifier diodes, or filter cap, but they're all brand new. could this all just be the circuit saying 'please put my ground reference on the DC side'?