preamp jumper cables


what are the purpose for these? a friend has a preamp with two sets of outputs and has developed a hum in her system. will plugging in those outputs with jumpers rid the problem, or make matters worse, or do i have this all wrong?

thanks in advance.
jp
jorgeparrapuppy
Gbart: She went from a Sony ES receiver to an Acurus A150 amp being fed by a Parasound 850 preamp and that's when the problem started, after about 2 months. I just moved all the components around and switched out the interconnects (which worked before for me)and in doing that, didn't fix anything.
Thanks to all for your quick responses. Any further advice would be greatly appreciated.
thanks again,
JP
Your friend may have ground loop somewhere in her system. Did she make any recent changes ?
Most preamps which have two sets of outputs have them jumpered together internally, so that they are both driven by the same internal circuit. Jumpering them together externally will not accomplish anything. Some preamps have separate driver (buffer) circuits for each of the two sets of outputs, in which case they definitely should NOT be jumpered together.

If you are referring to shorting plugs, which connect the center conductor of an rca connector to its outer (ground) terminal, those should never be used on outputs, only on inputs. Shorting an output stands a very good chance of damaging it, depending on its exact design. And I doubt that using shorting plugs on inputs will help a hum problem, although it is remotely conceivable that it could.

Regards,
-- Al