Live with A Hum vs. Buy An Outboard Phono Stage


It appears that I have an airborne hum that I can't seem to track down. I've done all the usual things (use cheater plugs, shorted ICs, etc.). Now, I am wondering if I should just ditch the whole effort, and buy an outboard phono amp, ala Bellari, Creek, and such. The turntable I have won't set the world on fire, but it does a more than adequate job if given the chance.

So, opinions please. Is it worth getting a phono stage, and plugging it into a dead-silent input, or will it suffer from the same thing?
licoricepizza
The only moving of the preamp has been to move it to a separate shelf by itself (no discernible difference). When I connected different amp, they were about 3' apart. No difference then either.

This morning, I put a metal widow screen behind the stereo to act as a shield, hoping the noise was coming from that direction. It was a no go.
You may have a different problem yet this site provides some potentially useful shielding and measurement solutions.

http://www.lessemf.com/mag-shld.html
After looking at the website, I'm wondering if I can anything like that at Home Depot, or Lowes.
An Update - which I hope is final.

The hum doesn't appear to be grounding related. Instead, it appears to be thermal in nature. If I turn off the amp, but leave the preamp powered up, there doesn't seem to a problem. For 2 days in a row now, there's been no hum.

If it ain't broke, I won't fix it.

Thanks to those who helped.

Lee

The problem appears
" If I turn off the amp, but leave the preamp powered up, there doesn't seem to a problem."

Well, you need the power amp with accompanying hum on to play, don't you?

Sounds like the transformers in the power amp is the cause of teh inductance hum in the phono-pre....same problem I had.

Try separating them further apart physically and see if that helps. if your IC is too short, use a cheap longer one temporarily just as a test to see if it helps. If it does, get a longer good IC to your liking and keep them apart.