That just means that you have not wasted the greater part of your adult chasing >>exactly, and in detail<< how electrons mate to make new baby electrons.
EDIT: Fixed left out words "have" and "how". All this time and I still can't accurately type what I'm thinking.
The big things to remember are that (1) all wires are really resistors, and make voltages as V = I*R; and (2) only one place can be designated as 0.000000V at any one time.
I think #2 will be really noticeable. #3 may clean up a lot of noise as opposed to hum. Keep in your hip pocket #1, and moving power tube cathodes and preamp star ground. You may need them, or may not. As you said, many amps are done that way.Here's the game plan:
1. Move PT Heater CT to filter cap neg.
2. Move PT HV CT to filter cap neg.
3. Single ground wire from filter cap neg. to chassis ground
4. Power tube cathodes will stay where they are (grounded to their individual mounting lugs like in 99.99% of all other amps).
5. Preamp star ground will remain where it is by V1/input/gain control
It's a good plan. Peel just the necessary layers of the onion.There is still another chassis star ground point over by the NFB/bias circuit. The filter caps are currently connected to that point, along with the NFB low-pass, and bias circuit. I will need to lift the filter caps from this point so they can ground to number 1/2/3 above.
Hopefully this reduces the noise floor some. It's not perfect, but I can't really rewire this entire amp without completely removing all the boards and desoldering everything.
I went and looked it up. It's a quality module, with attention paid to keeping the EMI off its input and output. It seems to only isolate the relay coil voltage from the DC voltage that the DC heaters float on. Presumably this is so the relay can be ground referenced to the chassis while the regulated 12V for the heaters that float above ground can also be fed to the input of the converter module. Interesting design choice. I'm not sure what to think, other than it seems complicated.Oh... also, the SMPS for the DC heaters has its own chassis ground over by the power/standby switches. What about that?
That is a Good Choice. It keeps the speaker return currents flowing back into the OT, not across the chassis to make noise.Same thing for the OT. It's grounded to chassis at the output jacks.
Keep in mind that the original issue, noise (hiss?) happens during note decay. That's a big red flag that there may be lurking oscillation/stability issues going on that only happen at certain signal levels. This is a common occurrence in solid state amps, rarer in tube stuff. If I were doing this, I'd get the main grounding issue worked on, along the lines you mention, and then see what the noise on decay does.