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Andre Jute Andre Jute is offline
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Default MFA Magus preamp hum/buzzing sound

On Nov 6, 1:22 am, "West" wrote:
Could you describe for our readership the errors I made and let them be the
judge (hope to hear from some, pro & con). I know it's difficult for you to
disagree objectively and present your contrasting opinions. Instead, its the
old and tired ad hominem approach. Do you really thing that the majority of
rodents buy your propaganda? Discuss the facts my man, if you can. That's
what this NG needs and deserves.

Cordially,
west


Asking Worthless Wiecky to specify the exact cause of any particular
generic bilious attack will result only in another generic bilious
attack. Worthless is a big pile of bile. Bile is a homogenous
substance, undifferentiated, undistinguished; it is what makes poor
Worthless simultaneously so dull and so offensive. A bilious attack
from Worthless is like a Wiki, compendious, meaningless, free and --
dare we say it? -- worthless.

Andre Jute
"Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from giving
us wordly evidence of the fact."-- George Elliot


"Peter Wieck" wrote in message

oups.com...

On Nov 5, 12:04 am, "West" wrote:
"Peter Wieck" wrote in message


ups.com...


On Nov 3, 11:39 pm, wrote:
I have a 1987 MFA Magus A2 preamp that a few weeks ago started

making
a buzzing/humming sound from both channels on any source setting. It
is strongest in the right channel but audible from both. I have
swapped out the line stage tube (6DJ8) to no effect. I have verified
that it is the Magus because if the amps are on (MFA M75 monoblocks)
and the preamp off there is no noise from the speakers. I have also
tried removing the phono stage tubes to eliminate them as the

problem
but again to no effect. The noise seems to start 20 or 30 seconds
after the preamp relay clicks on and after the amps warm up - in

other
words, it doesn't start as soon as the amps warm up but maybe 20
seconds later. Anyone have any ideas regarding what the problem

could
be and what I should do to fix it? Local technicians have little or

no
knowledge about tube gear so taking it to a shop isn't an option. It
seems to be slowly getting louder over time so I need to fix it. The
noise level does increase as the volume or gains are turned up if

that
helps. Any ideas?


Filter caps.


Peter Wieck
Wyncote, PA


I am not about to engage in a ****ing contest with you. My post was

meant to
teach and be friendly since it appeared that the OP had little or no
experience in electronics.
OTOH, your post, Mr. Wiecked, was again designed not to edify, but to
poison the well in order to promote yourself. Nice going ###hole. How

many
people are you going to chase away from this ng because of your
insecurities?
I'm a professional biomedical engineer and taught many college level
electronic courses while you are a pathetic net stalker.


unsigned out of utter contempt.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


West, you are the quintessential pillock. You make a post with bad
information in it with the sole purpose being to look as if you know
something. And in the context of someone who is not obviously familiar
with reasons for the problem described, bad information is _very_
dangerous. Despite your conscience-soothing warning. You and Andre do
share that characteristic of being invincibly ignorant much of the
time.


Peter Wieck
Wyncote, PA