- continuity of RCA outer sleeve to metal chassis... reads OL
- continuity of each RCA center pin and pin 2 of XLR... OL
- continuity of RCA outer sleeve and pin 1 of XLR... 000.0
- You said in an earlier post you checked for continuity from the ground pin of the power cord male plug to the metal chassis of the amp and the meter display read "OL"..., Open, no connection. Correct?
IF the RCA jack outer sleeve to the metal chassis reads OL then the signal ground is not connected to the chassis. You said in an earlier post the safety equipment grounding conductor of the power cord is not connected to the chassis either.
I will have to search the archives of AA for a post of Charles Hansen, owner of Ayre Acoustics, but that’s a no no. Something about capacitive feedback loops. Or something like that. At any rate I think it can add hum/buzz on the signal of the amp. (Without rereading all this thread, did you ever have the amp turned on without anything connected to the inputs of the amp? That thing should hum/buzz like crazy I would think. Especially if a ground cheater was used on the amp plug to wall receptacle.)
I am still confused why you measured 1 ohm of resistance, basically continuity, from the ground pin on the plug of the power cord to the outer sleeve of the RCA on the amp. That means the signal ground of the amp is connected to the equipment grounding conductor, wire, of the AC power cord.
You really need to address the problem/s with the amp first before you do anything else. You need to pull the top cover and see why the safety equipment ground of the power cord is not solidly connected to the metal chassis of the amp. Why it, the safety equipment ground wire, is some how connected to the signal ground. Both the signal ground and safety equipment should be connected to the metal chassis of the amp.
(Note: I see no user ground lift switch on the back rear panel of the amp for user preference.)