OK, maybe it's not 60 cycle hum, the heaters are lifted with a CT to the power R and cathode +, I thinks it 14v. as the schematic shows
The hum is there with no load, no guitar plugged in, when I turn the neg feeback on, the hum is a little less. But If I turn the volume, reverb or tremolo up the hum or feedback gets worst. It's playable but makes loud humming when idling with volume half way up.
The old cap can had two of the 40ufs grounded with the bridge rectifier ground point to the bd, no CT on PT. The other 80uf ground was tied to the OT common but all those grounds are grounded at the can's tabs, nothing was bolted or soldered to the chassis at that point so the ground for the filters were somewhere on the board....? I think probably through a standoff holding the bd. down...? I can't see any bolted or soldered ground point any where on the chassis except maybe a standoff holding the bd.
Another ground ran down the from the can to somewhere on the bd to the the preamp section. All pots and inputs were grounded by contact to the chassis and cases, I made sure they whee tight.
When I first replaced the three filters I had no hum but that weak OT problem, only thing was the old OT had one 8 ohm winding with two blk and two green sec. tied at the same point under the insulation, the new one didn't. I wired the new OT green to tip, ground to sleeve on isolated speaker jack mounted on the classic. I tapped off speaker jack's tip to a switch then to the neg feedback right before the 270K. The common I ran to the PI's cathode ground rih tafter the 8.2K R (end of feedback loop)
I used a long stand-off over the cap can hole and tied the three new filters wit ha couple of tie down, it's secure. I hooked up all the neg legs to one point o nthe three filters and soldered them to the stand-off point that was bolted to ground near t he PT.
But like, with the old OT no hum, new OT hum. It's something to do with the OT installation. I have the OT's plate wires twisted and away from the preamp section and PI, also moved the neg feedback wire clear of any other wires.
Maybe I need to check the tightness of the bolt but I doubt it's lose.
This is on of those things you need to see, as the schematic tells me nothing about how the grounding method.
Should I isolate the speaker jack, or use a switchcraft jack and also run a common to the cathode after the feedback loop too?
I can post pic's. What I did different was tied in all the grounds on the tab on the standoff holding the three filters, bolted to chassis, this wasn't done before, one of the old filters was grounded with the common only of the OT...? and the speaker jack was hanging so I guess it got grounded through the OT somehow.
al