Hum- help needed


It's been very strange and I cannot think of a logical explanation.
It will require all your attention.
1. Two mono blocks plugged in. EVERYTING ELSE IS UNPLUGGED,
ICs disconnected- hum in the R channel (can be heard from
2-3 ft. away)
Hum in the L channel- order of magnitude lower, I would consider it "normal", can only be heard with the ear to the driver.
So I would think, it's not a ground loop (nothing else is plugged in, heard in R ch. only.
2. R Amp. moved to the L speaker (other amp unplugged altogether)- no hum.
L amp. (used to be quiet), connected to the same L speaker, with the same power cord- hum.
3. All tubes switched L to R- no difference.
4. R amp moved back to the R speaker (position, where it used to hum- no hum.
5. L amp (used to be quiet)- hums, no matter what.
To sum it-up:
I think it's not a ground loop (see #1),
It's not the amp.- (see # 2),
It's not a speaker- (see # 2),
It's not the tubes- (see # 3)

So, here is my question- what the hell is it?
maril555
How old are the amps - were the amps everin storage - could it be electrolytic caps aging?
What kind of amp do you have. Clean your tube sockets and
check the fit of the pins in the sockets. Also clean the
tube pins. This May be why it shows up in both units and then goes away. Be carefull when tighting pin sockets.
if you can only hear it with your ear to the driver i would not worry about it. i have the same problem and it used to drive me crazy and i have spent days and hours trying to figure it out. i have been told by my stereo person with 20 plus years of experience that it does not hurt the sound and not to worry aobut it. i have finally taken his advice and now just enjoy my systme