These had to be replaced. R16 died, the others were replaced along with it.
It stopped working for a while as I was experimenting with it.
I'm thinking of sending it to the factory, at least I will write them again with a suggestion.
@dpop I have also tried RCA only interconnects with two of these chains. For example Bryston B60 doesn't have XLR inputs. Now I'm only using XLR between a preamp and a power amp.
33 ohms were measured on the EAR's phono ground pin or any screw (chassis) and the ground pin on the inlet. All the other solid state phono stages worked fine. Maybe except a Primare R15, there was a pretty loud surface noise, kind of like white noise.
I always thought it was a subjective point of view, my girlfriend keeps telling me I only keep analyzing the system (of course when I'm not happy with the sound). Nevertheless I always had a feeling there's not enough juice in it, specially with the Bryston B60, it wasn't stable, sounded weak or lean sometimes. I was always surprised when I took the amp elsewhere.
What else can we measure on the AC line when an electrician comes over?
There's a simple voltmeter on the power conditioner I'm using for the sources. It shows some drops time to time, it's usually around 228-229V but it goes down to 225. If we find out the AC line is horribly dirty and unstable, is a power plant good idea? Something like PS Audio PP12 (I'm just a bit confused now, I have seen some measurement that suggest it's an overpriced piece of crap and I'm being told to stay away from power conditioning)