I am trying to build Doug Hoffman's dual channel preamp to run through a Marshall dual 50 watt tube 9005 power amp. As is common with a two amp arrangement, I am getting what I believe to be ground loop noise. It has been suggested that I install a ground lift and Doug has said himself that he built the original version with only a two prong plug. Researching ground lifts, I came across a PDF written by Valvewizard that suggests using what he calls a hum loop block network. Here is how he describes it:
To combat the above problem of connecting two devices which both have audio inputs and outputs, some appliances will offer a ground lift switch. This disconnects one audio circuit from the chassis, breaking ground loop, as illustrated in fig. 13.16. Ground-lift switches are usually included in low-level preamps and mixers, rather than power amps. Note that the Earth bond between chassis and mains earth must never be broken; the chassis must remain safely earthed at all times.
An alternative to the ground lift switch is a hum-loop block network, as shown in fig. 13.17. The ground to chassis connection is made via a 10Ω resistor in parallel with a 100nF to 470nF poly’ or ceramic capacitor. The resistance should reduce ground-loop currents to negligible levels and must be a power device, say 5W, so that it is resilient to fault currents which might occur. The resistor alone would make the audio ground more susceptible to radio interference, so the capacitor is added to reduce the impedance between ground and earth, at radio frequencies. Sometimes a pair of high-current diodes (shown faint) are also connected in parallel, to act as a bypass path for serious fault currents. A 25A (or more) bridge rectifier package is quite convenient for this.
However, what if an amplifier has more than one channel, each with its own input? Then we must make a decision about where to make the chassis connection. We must not connect all the inputs to chassis since this would create a ground loop between the channels. If one of the channels has very much higher gain than the other(s) then that is the input we should connect to chassis, since the other channels are likely to be less sensitive to ground loop hum.
If the amplifier has more than one high-gain channel then it may be better to make the chassis connection further into the amplifier where the two channels mix and become one. Since this increases the chances of ground loop hum when other pieces of equipment are attached, as fig. 13.15 illustrated, the connection should be made via a hum-loop block network.
Is this overkill?
Another issue I am having trouble with is that the toroidal transformer I am using in order to cram the preamp into a 1u chassis, has what is labeled a static shield that I am not sure where to connect it to. Is anyone familiar with this and is it meant to be used to prevent ground loop noise as well?