A further thought. It would probably be worthwhile to invest a few dollars in a pair of shorting plugs such as these, and to put them on the unused rca inputs of the amps.
I see that the amp has a switch to select between the rca and xlr inputs. It is possible that noise being picked up at the rca input and its associated wiring or circuitry is coupling past the switch into the signal path, where it is then multiplied by the amp's high gain factor. Shorting plugs would probably help that.
Also, using the shorting plugs and selecting the rca inputs would allow you to make a more definitive assessment of the intrinsic noise levels of the amp, as others have said.
Before using the rca shorting plugs while using the xlr inputs, however, it would be a good idea to use a multimeter to verify that no continuity exists between the center pin of the rca connector and pins 2 and 3 of the xlr connector. Although I suspect it is not the case, I'm envisioning the possibility that the rca center pin may be connected directly to one of those two xlr pins, and the switch simply grounds the other pin when the rca input is used. In that situation using a shorting plug would ground one of the two input signals in the balanced signal pair.
BTW, be sure that the amp is turned off when and if you change the position of the input select switch. Also, for the benefit of others who may read this, shorting plugs should not be used where a component provides both rca and xlr inputs but does not have a switch to select between them. And of course they should not be used on the outputs of any component.
Regards,
-- Al
I see that the amp has a switch to select between the rca and xlr inputs. It is possible that noise being picked up at the rca input and its associated wiring or circuitry is coupling past the switch into the signal path, where it is then multiplied by the amp's high gain factor. Shorting plugs would probably help that.
Also, using the shorting plugs and selecting the rca inputs would allow you to make a more definitive assessment of the intrinsic noise levels of the amp, as others have said.
Before using the rca shorting plugs while using the xlr inputs, however, it would be a good idea to use a multimeter to verify that no continuity exists between the center pin of the rca connector and pins 2 and 3 of the xlr connector. Although I suspect it is not the case, I'm envisioning the possibility that the rca center pin may be connected directly to one of those two xlr pins, and the switch simply grounds the other pin when the rca input is used. In that situation using a shorting plug would ground one of the two input signals in the balanced signal pair.
BTW, be sure that the amp is turned off when and if you change the position of the input select switch. Also, for the benefit of others who may read this, shorting plugs should not be used where a component provides both rca and xlr inputs but does not have a switch to select between them. And of course they should not be used on the outputs of any component.
Regards,
-- Al