It doesn't //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
My stuff is based on designs that came about decades before stereo came into existence, you think I'm running balanced inputs? //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/biggrin.gif.d71a5d36fcbab170f2364c9f2e3946cb.gif
I read the thread this time. lol
You have a tube front end and tube amp and arn't satisfied with the noise from
the tube preamp. You should look into my suggestion, reduce the gain... call
the company up? Fish for a schematic? You can probably reverse engineer
the wiring and draw up a schematic, it can't be that hard. How much stuff
is inside the rogue?
Right now the solution is to migrate from a tube preamp to solid state?
If so, does the tube amp support higher voltage preouts? or can you
adjust the gain on that tube amp, even if you need to mod it.
Basically, that's what I'm getting at. A high voltage SS preout and reduce gain
tube amp will offer less audible noise. The balanced issue is a secondary issue
not applicable to your situation.
I had a problem with a SS amp where it was too noisy for my taste. A simple
mosfet design that when you placed your ear inches away from the tweeter,
you can hear audible hiss. The root cause is the circuit design, the quick fix is
to reduce the amp gain and feed this amplifier a higher voltage 'clean' input
to compensate. All it took was a opamp preamp circuit on the front end, simple.
This cured the amplifier problems, you could place your ear right on the tweeter
and hear no hiss.