So I was going to record some audio last night, but the hum in the amp seems to have gotten significantly worse. I've taken the steps to trace out the entire circuit with a highlighter as Doug suggested before, but I'm still getting a pretty nasty hum. One other thing that seems weird as well, is the plate voltage on the EL84's is running at 316 on two and 320 on the other two, and it gets really hot. The PT is only supposed to supply 280v per the schematic, so why are mine so hot? And the resistor is a 50 ohm 10watt one, do I need to adjust that then to reduce the plate voltage? Would excess voltage do that? It seems like no, it would just distort sooner and be a bit louder than expected right?
Edit: I also read the EL84 data sheet and it is supposed to run at most 300V, so I'm over voltage as well... What other measurements should I take and where?
What other measurements should I get?
I took this for the Power tubes(EL84):
Pin 1: .022 V,
Pin 3: 12V,
Pin 7: 316/320,
Pin 9: 314 on all.
Preamp Tubes(12AX7):
Pin 1: V1 138, V2 162, V3 222
Pin 3: V1 1v , V2 1.3V, V3 5.9V
Pin 6: V1 127V, V2 229V, V3 229V
Pin 7: V1 0V, V2 161V, V3 42V
Pin 8: V1 1V, V2 162V, V3 59V
This is with no input, and the volume pot up mostly to 10 to maximize the hum so I can see it on the scope.
So really two questions:
1. How do I reduce plate voltages
2. Where to I fix the hum?
For the hum side, I did look around for where the hum comes from with the scope, and it seems to come from only one side on the pin 1 inputs coming from the caps to the cut pot. If you look at the AC30 schematic:
http://el34world.com/Hoffman/files/Hoffman_AC30.pdf I think it was V4 and V5 outputs that seemed to be where hte noise comes from. Is it just not grounding well there? Or is it grounding too early somehow?
if I turn the cut to the extreme end it almost completely goes away.
~Phil