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I have tried quite a few things on my own to try and find the origin of a slight flutter, flutter, flutter coming from the tweeters. At this point it is either the amps or the preamp. It is not audible from my chair but the fact that it is there is making me angry.If I disconnect inputs to the preamp the buzz is still there.If I turn off the music server the buzz is still there with inputs connected.If I add a cheater plug to the amps the buzz is way worse - sounds like a grounding issue.For background the amps are balanced inputs only. The preamp has only psuedo balanced connections and the preamp itself is NOT grounded to the AC. It only has hot and neutral inputs connected off the IEC. So the balanced connectors have the shield and return tied together at each connector. Not sure this is relevant but mentioning it.I am using balanced cables between the pre and amps right now. I don't recall that SE cables were less noisy with an adapter at the amp end. If it were the case I'd be there in the set-up.If I move the amps to a different outlet on the same circuit the noise is the same.If I move the entire front end power strip to a separate circuit, the noise is the same.This tells me that the amps or preamp are causing the noise.Any suggestions?
I'm not sure how you made the connection from "flutter, flutter, flutter" to a 60Hz issue, but the obvious thing to try (which you didn't mention) is to disconnect the preamp from the amps and see if the problem remains. That might tell you something.....maybe not.I'm also unclear if this is a "power conditioning" issue or not. Maybe the power conditioning is causing the problem?Power "conditioning" is such a nebulous topic. Dave,
Big Red, I think this is a mistake to do. I would sever the ground and signal wire connection (at both ends) of your XLR interconnect. The amp(s) are grounded, so the shield of the XLR is grounded.......Now you have signal return (pin 3) and shield (pin 1) making a loop. IMO.And really the proper term for pin 1 is "shield". It gathers all the nasty RF and other hash and gets it away, but you have mixed it in with the signal.........Wayner
Gotta have a load on the amps when you turn them on, correct? Otherwise you'll get a god-awful loud hum.If I leave the pre OFF, the amp ON, I get the same noise.
Only XLR inpts on the amps Wayner.Tried amps only with no connections and it was the same sound, slightly louder. Not much.Tells me the amps are never going to be absolutely quiet.No sense in going down the "power conditioning" trail as that's not going to fix this issue. It still sounds great, just knowing it was there bugged me. Will havta live with it for now.
No amplifier I have owned over the last 30 years could be operated without the inputs being shorted or terminated by a source or load.
Wow.