I've resurrected a 1948 RSA/Selmer amplifer (electrolytic caps, leaking coupling caps & drifted resistors replaced, plus one input adjusted for guitar), and added an isolation transformer for safety. Adjusted schematic below. The amp runs well, but has excessive 50hZ (I'm in the UK) hum which increases as you turn either volume control up, and is also affected tone-wise as you rotate the tone control. I'm currently examining lead dress and grounds for the AC heaters, which are series connected from rectifiers to first amplification stages and then chassis, as I suspect this is the main cause of noise entering the first gain stages.
Physically I have four chassis ground points:
- The safety earth cord is terminated to a bolt of the isolation transformer inside the chassis, and above the chassis (same bolt, different tag washer) I have the ground reference for the isolation transformer.
- The first two filter caps are grounded to tags on another bolt of the isolation transformer inside the chassis.
- The output tube cathode resistor, speaker jack and phase inverter transformer (L1) ground at a tag located on one of the rectifier tube socket bolts.
- All preamp/PI grounds connect to a bus, terminating to the chassis at a tag on one of the V1 tube socket bolts...this is also where the series heaters are grounded.
It's worth noting that the control pots and associated wiring physically have shielding which is grounded to the chassis plate they are mounted on.
I'm assuming that it's probably not a great idea to have the AC heaters running direct to the chassis at the same point as the DC preamp circuit grounds? How would folks advise approaching the grounding scheme?