Hi Darryl,
Before you do anything, call your power company and have them come out and check the ground to your service. They will (should) do this for free and most times the power company will check the outlets as well as a customer service. If that checks out ok, proceed to what Phild said. And what he said about the adapter plugs that eliminate the ground pin is absolutely correct. You need only one component grounded at the outlet, all others ground through interconnects that are properly designed. These adapters are very inexpensive. Probably less than the shipping on a "tweak", and a lot more effective. If after that you still have problems, power down, remove the adapters and plug back in, remove 1 pair of interconnects completely from the system and power back up. Repeat this, removing a different pair each time. Once a pair passes, they are plugged back in after power down, and the next pair removed prior to power on. It's a process of logical elimination. It could be a bad interconnect, or it could be a component, and that would not be discovered until you fail this test. It's a process of elimination, keep logically eliminating more until you find the culprit. The absolute last thing you should do is buy a tweak. This is a problem, that is a bandaid, and electronics don't heal well. Tom