a schematic would be helpful.
preamps are designed to take a small voltage signal at the grid of the 1st stage and make it a lot bigger. What we hear is probably noise at the first stage getting amplified. (without a schematic, we don't know where the volume pot is, so I'm assuming its after the first stage?). So, perhaps a small ground loop buzz or noise coming in on the ground shield of the cable., nonetheless, noise applied to the preamp, and the preamp is going what it designed to do: amplify signal. unfortunately, the signal is noise.
In this test,, what we don't know is how relatively small or large that noise is compared to the instrument signal you plan to use the preamp for. is this noise 1/10 or 1/100 of the audio signal that'll come from the instrument. Afterall, this is a super high gain device. How many gain stages did you say? 3 or 6? maybe +30dB or more? even 1mV of noise will be a garden hose coming out the other end...
Is this preamp designed for (1) amplification of a low output microphone or (2) just for an elaborate EQ or (3) for tube overdrive crunch (like a matchless hotbox)? If its for tube overdrive crunch? can you hear the noise when crushing the 1st stage with high output pickups and power chords?
I've build several preamps for different purposes. Here's some things I've learned:
- filaments don't need to be DC, but no matter what the ground reference (CT, hum-pot, or otherwise) location to the rest of the circuit is important.
- a ground lift (not a open/close switch) is important. the circuit ground shouldn't be connected directly to chassis and to green wire of power input. See Valvewizards ground chapter and check out the ground lift section.
- RF will come in on the ground shield of a cable (your vid doesn't sound like RF) so google aiken amps grounding write up and see what he says about grounding the instrument shield with a cap at the input jack.
- read valvewizard's grounding and power supply chapters over and over...