Turntable/Subwoofer Ground loop


I have a Rel B1 that is hooked up to Cary MB500 monoblocks via the high level connections.

I am starting to get a ground loop hum from the sub when I play a record. Only when the needle hits the record does it start. I have re-checked all connections, what could it be?

All the ground wires are connected what I think is correctly, but the high level connection from the amps to the sub has the wires stretched quit a bit to reach the amps and the ground.

Should I ground the Sub connection to somthing different, like the rack???
macdadtexas
If you are not using a 3 wire speakon cable, make sure not to use two negatives on the high-level input. From speakers: Red and black on left speaker. Red on right.
To get rid of EMI you need a turntable mat like Micro Seiki, SAEC etc  
Mac, you say the "hum" begins as soon as your stylus hits the record which means it is your turntable. The Grado problem was already mentioned but other cartridges can be afflicted by a poorly shielded motor. As you move the cartridge closer to the motor the hum typically worsens. If your tonearm is too light for the cartridge or the cartridge too stiff for the tonearm You can excite a resonance which will feedback through the subwoofer. Adding head shell weights will stop it. How much depends on the mismatch. Get a Hi HI News test record and add weight till you get below 12 Hz but no lower than 8 Hz. I like between 8 and 10 Hz. I think you get better bass (more detailed) this way. Also if the subs have room control if the level is boosted at the right frequency and the turntable is in a "peek" location It will make things worse. 

Good Luck,
Mike
Make sure your subwoofer is secured properly to the floor. I had serious resonance feedback/hum when I put the REL subwoofer on a Subdude Auralex platform.  It took me some time to figure out it was the platform -  then ended up blue tacking the subwoofer to my wood floor.  Got rid of the resonance and now it works fine. 

The problem may also be that your turntable is not isolated properly.  What kind of rack do you have it on?
You didn't say what turntable and cart you are using.

If per chance you have a DD turntable, and are using a moving iron cartridge, (such as a Grado), this is most likely your problem.  The moving iron cart picks up emi from the DD motor.
Humming more again after some improvent. Only from the high level input. When that is disconnected, no hum, and no hum from any other componenet, or when playing anything except the turntable???
That's correct. just a quick way to see if the feedback is mechanical. most subs have a phase switch.
Tonywinsc,

I think you may be right. I isolated the phono cable and most of the hum went away, I need to try inverting the phase of the turntable. Good advice, thanks.
Is the hum the typical 60Hz hum? If it is 60 Hz then it is a ground loop issue. Otherwise, you might try improving the mechanical isolation of your turntable. Low frequency feedback from the sub could be exciting your turntable. Another quick check- invert the phase on the sub and see if the hum stops. That might also indicate a mechanical feedback issue.
I had this same issue with my Rel Stadium III, after I changed from at stereo amp to mono blocks. Take the ground wire and connect it to the grounding terminal on your preamp. I also hear that Rel makes a cable for it with 2 ground wires but I have never seen it.