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I was thinking because of the situation that every time anywhere in your source and amplifier the grounds of the signal are connected you will create a group loop like it or not.The only way I can come up with to eliminate it is to eliminate one path. Essentially disconnecting a wire on one of the RCA cords, if both source and amplifier have connected grounds. This is commonly the case. Any thoughts?
My amp is grounded properly. I have done a lot of reading on this.I tried grounding the RCA's differently to avoid a loop that went through the amplifier boards but realized you still create a loop with the RCA's themselves, which become antennas, at least with my amplifier boards, no matter what you do, unless you reduce the ground from source to one wire, or you separate the grounds at the source. When I tried it, it actually had a very bad affect making one of the cables a super antenna by the way.
According to Peter Daniels everything is proper.
What is your way of grounding?
The star ground is connected to chassis. That is as far as that goes. It seems to be less humm and more RF. I am told that a 330pf capacitor between the inverting and non-inverting input pins on the chip might rid the RF (7 and .
Noise travels through the ground circuit just as readily as anywhere else. You could have something feeding noise into the ground system. Try grounding one side of your RCA cord and then probe around with the RCA's ground wire inside the amp for a quiet spot. Some amps have a capacitor that goes from one side of the AC mains to ground. Does yours have that? Is your amp grounded via the third pin on the IEC socket? Try disconnecting that. I forgot to mention: Are your RCA jacks insulated from the enclosure? Mine always are so I can choose a quiet ground location.