Need Help: What In My Home Electric System Killed the Sound?


Could really use some troubleshooting from you electric experts out there, of which I certainly am not one.  House is in rural western Maine.  My electrician (licensed and very experienced, but not in audiophile context) is running a dedicated line to the 2-channel rig.  He installed the new line up to the outlet, but didn't complete yet (we're waiting for delivery on the outlet), so the new line is temporarily capped off at the wall.  In the meantime, elsewhere in the house, he changed a broken recessed light socket and changed the related wiring to that light.  Those are the only two changes to the electric I am aware of.   The 2-channel system remains plugged into the same outlet we've been using for years (until the dedicated line is in).  This weekend, the life is gone fro the system.  For example, volume at "25" on the pre-amp would normally be quite loud, but now it needs to be turned up to 40 to get the same loudness.  Regardless, dynamics are gone, tempo is a tiny bit slow and has lost toe tapping, and vocals moved from near field to way back in the mix.   Nothing was changed in the system (Rega Saturn CDP; McIntosh C52; McIntosh 452; and Polk SDA 1.2 TL (heavily modded)).   Any thoughts on what might have cause these symptoms?  Electrician can't pinpoint anything.  Any input appreciated.  
whitecap
Clarification:  Go to the breaker box, and switch on and off the circuit breakers, and observe what shuts off and on, to trace the individual lines.
Thanks for all the suggestions and comments.  Alas, we are still in the process of elimination.  Since my OP, the electrician has retraced every step and assured proper connections and grounds, etc.  Importantly, he has checked the voltage with a fancy device and reports that voltage is exactly 115 with only tiny (non-material) variations.  Extension cord running off different circuits produced no improvement.  So, we have ruled out house or Maine Central Power as the cause.  (Note, however, that this home is at the foot of a mountain, gets hit hard by storms, and the locals tell me three weeks ago the thunder and lighting in the area were epic.)  Next, in the system, I replaced the CDP source, but no change.  As I see it, that leaves two candidates: (i) McIntosh C2500 pre-amp (correction from the OP, its a C2500 not C52 -- I had an early senior moment) or (ii) MC452.  It being the weekend, I wasn't able to talk to McIntosh to get guidance on which might be the target.  So I rolled the dice and am shipping the C2500 in for a check up (couldn't deal with packing up the 110 lb beast).  Fingers crossed its the pre-amp, and can be a quick fix; I am having the wife's family up for the Fourth and desperately need the rig in full throat to drown out the sister in law's non-stop mouth.

I had a very similar problem before I upgraded the homes wiring. My electric Bass rig would have low volume or cut out all together. It turned out to be an old receptacle in the garage which was used next to an old work bench that was simply trashed. Once replaced the rest of that circuit worked fine. 




Hi Whitecap, the first thing I think I would do in your situation is to simply sit tight and wait...at least a month to 6 weeks or so. Home electrical systems can be thought of as a ’single large circuit’ that, with your own typical use patterns, has reached (more or less) a state of homeostasis. Anytime you make a change to the circuit (in this case the wiring) you run a risk of disturbing that homeostasis until enough time goes by for it to recover. If 6 weeks go by and there is Z-e-r-o change, then I’d be looking for a problem with the electrical system and not with my gear that I know happened to be doing quite alright before the alteration. In the case of a continuance of the sound problem, I believe I’d start with asking the electrician if he is qualified to be able to give you a reliable verdict on the state of your home’s ground (assuming it was originally designed with a ground...your original duplexes would all show 3-prongs, not 2). If he’s not confident he can be very accurate about the test results, perhaps he may know of someone who is (the true, correct method for checking ground properly can be tricky for the novice). Also, the effectiveness of the grounding for homes in many parts of the country tends to be at or close to nil after about a decade or so. Your electrician should know all or most of how to restore good grounding, the only tricky part may be accurately measuring it. While you’re at it, ask if your electrician if he actually disturbed any part of your home’s ground system in the course of his work...I know sometimes old connections that were broken can have much higher resistance when rejoined if not cleaned properly.

p.s. sorry to hear about your sister-in-law...my advice is to just get some old earbuds to your phone and just make hand gestures like you can’t hear her... :>)
just a suggestion , but make sure you or someone else didn't accidentally adjust the input level in the pre  on one or all of the inputs . usually done per  source input.
I know i had a c47 and  I did this , then if forgot how to get back to it .
If i remember it is a little tricky to get into the settings.