Since your amplifier is microphonic then its gain is much too high.
What regulator would you recommend? And what do you mean by screening?Use good regulators, again not the 780x series. Use lower gain and good screening.
I'm also curious as to the two different ground symbols and what they mean in real construction. R14 also looks very suspicious. That's why I wanted to see a photograph.
Ideally, you want the resistance at the + and - inputs of the amp to be equal so the symetrical input stage of the amplifer is fed from equivalent sources.
You do not use noisy zener diodes to bias an opamp. Instead you use two resistors as a voltage divider and a filter capacitor to prevent hum.I've made different designs with the same problems, I'm not talking about any particular design. An example would be a simple inverting op-amp design with a mains transformer and rectifier as a psu I made the other day. I had heavy humming at first (as expected since the non-inverting input was simply biased to 1/2 supply), but after replacing the bias resistors with zener diodes the humming disappeared completely. What was left was this hissing noise we've been talking about. I know zener diodes can be noisy, but can the noise really be heard with a gain of 10? The load was a 32Ohm headset, not sure about the sensitivity. I'm also aware of thermal noise from resistors, but I was under the impression that this noise was vanishingly low so that it wasn't an issue in audio amplifier designs? Another example would be an op-amp input stage with a bjt class AB output stage. The power supply on this amplifier was a shitty 24V wall wart, but even after adding a regulator to make the supply smooth, the hissing noise was still quite annoying.
I guess I could lower the gain quite a bit on many of my designs, but that would make the amp less acceptable to different load impedance's.
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