Once in a while I have to say the "with all due respect........ to TLS guy (because I respect the guy
), but like 3dB said...........we know how he is like, sometimes
.
Anyway, I too, would state on record again, that transformers do hum, you may not hear them but others may and better designed/built ones would be hardly audible under most conditions. I had purposedly visited more than one high end dealers in order to listen to those hums and found even high end ones that you would not expect them to cut corners, had transformes in them that hummed. I am not going to mention names for the obvious reasons. I bet I can hear that Quad without playing doctor, but if TLS guy cannot hear it with his doctor's instrument then I suspect there may be other reasons but I'd rather not go there
. My AV7005 is very amazing quiet and I think incapsulating the transformer might have help. There are ways to migitate the inherent noises, but would be practically difficult to eliminate them.
For those interested, go visit a high voltage substation and tell me if you could hear those >150 MVA transformer yelling at you over the fence at the power line frequency and the associated harmonics (predominantly 2nd). Pick an off peak period so the cooling fans won't be running. And yes, stick with GE, Westinghouse, ABB to make sure they are made by reputable companies.
Like GE, ABB is a highly reputable company, follow the link you can read about how they talked about trying to "reduce" transformer noises, they did not talk about eliminating them.
http://www04.abb.com/global/seitp/seitp202.nsf/0/968e648efc0fd948c12574eb0048eb14/$file/The+Sound+of+Silence.pdf
Those are large power transformers, but the principles remain the same. You can wrap the coils tight, but they still move and all we can do is to try mimizing noise to the point it won't bother us. Of all the amps/avr I own and owned, there was one that I could hear from about a foot away, that's what got me curious to visit high end stores to find out for myself whether I should returned that unit or not. After bench marking the best I could at the time, I decided not to bother returning it.
I have the feeling that this has become an argument mainly between those who have some background in electrical engineering or physics. For other normal people, they must be wondering why we are wasting time debating something that is not an issue in real life, like THD, <0.02%, but >0.01%, is that normal or not, who cares?