It may not sound right but try disconnecting the ground altogether. I had an older Dual TT that did the same thing but it went away when I disconnected the ground. It's worth a try.
It may not sound right but try disconnecting the ground altogether. I had an older Dual TT that did the same thing but it went away when I disconnected the ground. It's worth a try.
When you say phono cables do you mean the right and left cables that run the audio or the power cord? I have decent ones running the audio but I could try to change them.It also helps to pay attention to cable-dressing. Try to distance your phono cable from power cables and don't run it parallel to them (cross them at right angles). Phono signals are even more prone to interference than their line-level cousins. If you haven't already, you might want to try stepping-up to a well-shielded phono cable rather than a run-of-the-mill interconnect.
I know this was not asked but yeah, send it back but save some money and get a shure M97xe. They are dead quiet, track very well and sound surprisingly good.Grados are notorious for humming. Send it back.
I like LOMC's personally but that's very good advice. Lots of happy M97xe owners out there.I know this was not asked but yeah, send it back but save some money and get a shure M97xe. They are dead quiet, track very well and sound surprisingly good.
Just a recommendation
Cartridge prices across the board have nearly doubled in the last couple of years. It's getting to be ridiculous.I was going to suggest trying a Sumiko Blue Point Special cartridge, but the price is double what i paid for mine when i bought it when it first came out.