I don't think the ground is the problem.
Here is my theory:
Right now I think there might be DC on the line. DC can cause a toroidal transformer to saturate. Now what if its not very much DC, less maybe only about .3 to .5 volts...
In standby the amp might be OK. At full power the toroid saturates and the resulting inrush blows the breaker.
By adding the power cord there is enough voltage drop and resulting reduction in current inrush that things hold up.
In other places tried there is no DC on the line.
DC is a good culprit as we are talking about multiple dwellings in a single building.
There are 3 solutions I can think of:
1) have a current inrush limiter installed ()this might allow the amp to power up but I bet the transformer will be mechanically noisy)
2) have a DC blocker circuit installed (a rectifier bridge bypassed with electrolytic caps of the right value) We are talking about $15-$20 worth of parts. This is something I would have Cary do.
3) use a DC blocker with the circuitry of 2) in it.
You could test this theory by getting the DC Blocker of 3) and seeing if it sorts things out. If it does, I would have the amp modified by Cary to have these parts installed. Its an easy fix.
Here is my theory:
Right now I think there might be DC on the line. DC can cause a toroidal transformer to saturate. Now what if its not very much DC, less maybe only about .3 to .5 volts...
In standby the amp might be OK. At full power the toroid saturates and the resulting inrush blows the breaker.
By adding the power cord there is enough voltage drop and resulting reduction in current inrush that things hold up.
In other places tried there is no DC on the line.
DC is a good culprit as we are talking about multiple dwellings in a single building.
There are 3 solutions I can think of:
1) have a current inrush limiter installed ()this might allow the amp to power up but I bet the transformer will be mechanically noisy)
2) have a DC blocker circuit installed (a rectifier bridge bypassed with electrolytic caps of the right value) We are talking about $15-$20 worth of parts. This is something I would have Cary do.
3) use a DC blocker with the circuitry of 2) in it.
You could test this theory by getting the DC Blocker of 3) and seeing if it sorts things out. If it does, I would have the amp modified by Cary to have these parts installed. Its an easy fix.