I've been trying to troubleshoot a hum in my deluxe reverb build for the past week or so with no luck. I got a deluxe reverb small parts kit from mojotone and used it to convert my DRRI to a point to point amp. It had intermittent problems and was unusable to gig with, so I figured this would be a fun project to take on. I got rid of everything from my old deluxe besides the 2 amp fuse, transformers, tubes, a couple tube sockets, and the power cable. And I'm also using a stereo footpedal cable instead of 2 RCA jacks and kept the RCA reverb input/output slots at the bottom under my turret board.
The amp works fine besides the hum, tremelo and reverb are working fine as well. I think it sounds quite a bit better than my old deluxe besides the hum of course. I know the tubes arent the issue since I used them in my original deluxe reverb and even tried tubes from another amp to make sure. The hum comes on as soon as I turn on standby (if the tubes are hot), even with all the knobs at 0 and no instrument plugged in. I still have a slight hum when pulling out all of the preamp tubes except v6, then a louder one with v6 + v1. I feel like the buzz goes away with the slight hiss I get as I turn the volume knob up to max, but it's hard to tell with the extra noise from the pot on max.
I moved the bias board to the left side of the transformer so I could fit a few extra knobs on the front where the fender logo usually is. I have it wired so the volume knobs for both channels and master are by the pilot light ( volume for normal channel - volume for tremelo - master - light) with the treble knob moved to the volume slot and mid where the treble would normally be. Could the volume knobs being this close to the transformer/far away from the original spot cause the hum? I wired the pots in the new position but haven't wired the mid knobs or master as I want to get the amp working according to the original schematic before modifying it, even if I moved the parts around. I originally used regular 18 AWG cloth wire, but am now using coax (from volume pots to v1 + v2, from volume to treble pots and on the inputs) to see if it will help with the noise.
When "chopsticking" around the amp I have a pretty loud microphonic spot at V6 on the second pin that continues to the 1M resistor and 0.001 capacitor. Could this be contributing to the hum? The parts are new from mojotone so I don't think they would be the problem. I resoldered the joint, tried to move the wire dress and even went as far as replacing the entire V6 tube socket but still have the microphonics. I've tried multiple tubes here with the same result.
I found a forum entry from someone else taking on a similar project and it seems they needed a new transformer. I'd like to see if there's anything else I could try as the tranformer worked fine in my old amp.
My grounds could also be an issue, so I'll leave them below.
Grounding:
Back near power transformer -power cable, power tubes, bias board, 2 power amp filter caps ground
Near the top of power transformer - 100 ohm center tap, ground from power transformer and ground
Pots with buss bar on back going into ground for input 2 on both channels with all board grounds and 3 preamp filter caps
Reverb pedal at jack ground, black from reverb transformer at reverb output.
I kept the same wires going to the same pins for the filament wiring (ex. Same wiring goes to pins 4+5 on all preamp tubes) with the wire from 5+4 on the preamps going to 7 on the power tubes and then 9 to 2.
This is my first build, so I'm very new to all of this. I'd really love to get rid of the buzz so I could feel comfortable using this amp for gigging/recording. Any help or troubleshooting advice is very much appreciated!