… DC into your woofer might burn up the voice coil but won’t move the diaphragm…
@lewm
That is false… DC will make a constant magnetic field that will then push the diaphragm off center.
It would need to be a pretty high offset to deliver enough energy to move it to overload the woofer thermally.
If it is not moving the diaphragm, then there is no AC and no DC.
Whatever the source is that’s moving your woofer it is an AC signal doing the work..
Yes AC, but AC that is at a low frequency.
Hence my earlier suggestion of a DC blocking capacitor, which blocks low frequencies.
But the freqs needing to be quashed, maybe higher than 20Hz as the table is turning at ~2Hz and the think is rising and settling over a small angular extent.
The problem isn’t solved really. That woofer pumping should not occur to that extent. I believe there is a problem with the ELAC PPA-2 balanced input. Both single end inputs function fine. I’ll be looking into it this weekend. I bought to unit on US Audiomart so no warranty for me.
Even more troubling @mitchellcp is that the causal mechanism is not known.
It would be interesting to try another phono stage that is balanced to help identify you hypothesis of the ELAC. But it seems like a rational conclusion.
A pragmatic person might just chuck in the RCAs.