static/electrical interference sounds from speaker


Jeff Rowland Integrated amp (Concentra 2)
Proac 2.5 speakers
Oppo 983 for Video and SACD
Arcam FMJ23 for Redbook cd's
Martin Logan Sub

Sometimes after watching a movie for and hour or so I get loud electrical interference from my speakers. If I touch the amp or the power cord I can actually make the sound with my hands.

If I unplug the amp for a few minutes it sometimes goes away. Sometimes not.

I also notice when this happens the amp is running much hotter than normal to the touch.

Any ideas?

Louis
yashu
Funny, while I'm looking at this post, I noticed my little computer speakers were making the same noises - lots of crackling and static sounding. I moved some wires off the speaker wires and power cord, and the noises are all gone. It's the same kinda stuff. You'll have to move things and trouble-shoot
If I'm wrong on the "grounded anyway" thing, someone who's an electrical expert PLEASE ADVISE othewise!
No-one wants to get electricuted here, I'm sure.
it's just process of elimination. You'll be unplugging interconnects, powercords, and speaker cables to see what's the offending cause. Once you find it, you can issolate it.
Are your speaker cables touching anything with power? Are they in the wall or on the floor (possibly touching some other gear?
Otherwise, yes, try disconnecting sources, one at a time (including interconnnects), and see if the noise goes away.
(also, there is no reason you can't use the cheater-plugs on some of your pieces, as long at you have at least one or two of your components in your system grounded safetly - as they'll all be connected anyway, and thus grounded.
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Ground loop or more likely failed component.

Check you have a proper ground (no cheater plugs)and try plugging everything into the same recepticle (OPPO 983 and Amp) - use a power bar if necessary. If that does not cure it then one of the power supply caps or a transistor may be on its last legs (works cool but fails under stress/heat). (Some type of caps will arc as they fail and may self repair but if it is dried out or seriously damaged then you'll need to raplace it)

Another way to avoid/minimize ground loops is to use TOSLINK from source to amp or XLR rather than RCA type analog connections...