Warner,
Just happened to me yesterday...
I had a switching power supply (wart type unit used to charge DC batteries) still plugged in to my BPT. I happned to have it on same outlet as my turntable. It wasn't connected to anything, but as they do not have on-off switches, it was powered on.
I happened to be listening to my TT at the time...and upon pulling the power wart from the BPT, I
immediately noticed a layer of grunge removed. I couldn't believe it...the draw on this thing is only 0.5 amps, but it absolutely polluted the analog turntable output.
My computer is in my office, which is also my listening room. Despite all the power conditioning I have, things sound cleaner/better when I've turned off the computer completely (it is run thru a Brick Wall power filter and my audio system has a brick wall, the BPT and an effective Enacom mains filter in an unused outlet receptacle)
On the other hand, I used the JVC digi-receivers for quite some time...and noticed no such contamination with them plugged in or not. These receivers have small toroids, not switched supplies, btw. But, the FM in the last model I owned, the F10, was
completely worthless. I assume due to RFI spewing out.
So it may be, all amps with switched power supplies generate garbage, but amps with linear supplies (transformers) do not. I'm not engineer, nor is my testing subjects vastly wide enough, it's just seems like it pointing to that, at least.
I owned a TEAC A-L700P with switched power supply, and don't remember if that contaminated the rest of the system. I was just so simply shocked how dang good that thing was for $99.00 with oodles of mains conditioing that I never bothered to check