hi Jimbox; first...very nice system; i'll bet it sounds excellent.
i would strongly recommend that you disconnect your speakers from your amps temporarily. the reason is that the ceramic mid-range of your wonderful CRM 3.2's is relatively fragile and those 'pops' could easily shatter them. i use to own Kharma Exquisite Reference speakers with the same drivers and i shattered three of them over the three years i owned them.
next find another speaker (it could be just about anything) and connect it to the right hand Matrix MP150. play the music again and see if you get another 'pop'. if you do then connect this speaker to the other MP150 to see if that side pops. if it does not then switch interconnects with the right and left output of the ART preamp and then see if the right MP150 'pops'with the left input of the ART. you simply need to isolate the problem to the one amp before you go any further (but without blowing up your ceramic driver).
obviously; if you don't get a 'pop' with the left input from the ART your problem is not the amp. you then need to isolate the right channel of your preamp; followed by the right channel of your source.....until you determine the source of the 'pop'. i do agree that the amp is the likely source but not for certain until proven. a 'pop' from your ART could trigger the protection circut of the MP150 and shut it down. the ART has those nasty tube thingys.....which when going bad can 'flare' or 'sputter' and could be your problem. this would be the 'DC' (direct current) your friend speaks of.
don't assume anything.
once you isolate the problem to the right hand MP150 e-mail your dealer or Kharma directly; Kharma was always very helpful to me. a class 'D' amp is pretty simple but you may have some sort of 'part failure'.
i would strongly recommend that you disconnect your speakers from your amps temporarily. the reason is that the ceramic mid-range of your wonderful CRM 3.2's is relatively fragile and those 'pops' could easily shatter them. i use to own Kharma Exquisite Reference speakers with the same drivers and i shattered three of them over the three years i owned them.
next find another speaker (it could be just about anything) and connect it to the right hand Matrix MP150. play the music again and see if you get another 'pop'. if you do then connect this speaker to the other MP150 to see if that side pops. if it does not then switch interconnects with the right and left output of the ART preamp and then see if the right MP150 'pops'with the left input of the ART. you simply need to isolate the problem to the one amp before you go any further (but without blowing up your ceramic driver).
obviously; if you don't get a 'pop' with the left input from the ART your problem is not the amp. you then need to isolate the right channel of your preamp; followed by the right channel of your source.....until you determine the source of the 'pop'. i do agree that the amp is the likely source but not for certain until proven. a 'pop' from your ART could trigger the protection circut of the MP150 and shut it down. the ART has those nasty tube thingys.....which when going bad can 'flare' or 'sputter' and could be your problem. this would be the 'DC' (direct current) your friend speaks of.
don't assume anything.
once you isolate the problem to the right hand MP150 e-mail your dealer or Kharma directly; Kharma was always very helpful to me. a class 'D' amp is pretty simple but you may have some sort of 'part failure'.