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Is there a particular volume level, "type' of music or somethng else that would be a common denominator when the amps shut down?
Although you already swapped mono blocks back and forth I would do it again, leaving the amp that "died" on you when it was in the right position permanently on the other side. If the problem recurs and the right hand amp goes again this will at least tell you that you have not one but two touchy amps or, more likely, that there is something seriously amiss in the right channel of your phono preamp.
OK, my first impression is that NOTHING you did changed anything. It is the TIME involved, then the amp probably had gone into overload and shut down to protect itself. time goes by.. works. period. This is my theory.As for the near explosive loud POP. Somewhere in the phono circuit is a problem. it is getting a full voltage hit for a moment, amplifying it and BOOM your amp is shutting down to keep the speaker from exploding.So the problem is in the phono section, or in the cart wiring, or static electricity is building up and discharging into the channel that is going boom.I do NOT think it is static. I think a wire, or some serious fault is in your phono section.This is my diagnosis
100 percent positive its not the amplifiers. I play them all the time with never a hiccup. I think a big thing that people are missing is that when the right channel stopped working, I moved the right amplifier to the left and it worked....When I moved it back to the right immediately after it has just been working on the left, it DIDN'T work again.
I think the speaker cable got crimped by the speaker and caused the problem.
Ok, I missed that.I don't think I see any evidence of this being the case.
What I'm thinking right now is that you have some sort of sporadic instability in your system before the power amps. Maybe the phono preamp or preamp. When it shows up, the amp will shut down, either because of a huge transient (the pop), or because of a lot of DC on the output (or both). Whichever amp you then connect to that channel will go into protection and not produce any output. Then the problem goes away for a while and everything seems to work fine - until next time.
If the cable did get crimped (shorted) and that caused the problem you really need to replace the cable. Even if it doesn't do it again the cable is going to cause you problems down the road (sonically if not electrically). Why not move the cable as well as the amp to the left side (as I suggested before)? That would put both suspect components out of the right channel and, if the problem comes back on the right side, you should be even more certain that the problem is further upstream.