Michael, as I said earlier: if you leave the amps in place and swap the tubes and the noise follows (one of) the tubes, then it's the tube. Well it didn't, so you know BOTH tubes are OK. Now, if you swap the amps (L to R) and the noise follows (one of) the amps, then it's that amp -- which is what I guessed to begin with. It's NOT one of your other components.
There's either a bad electronic part or a bad connection in that one amp. Have the dealer send it back to Lamm for repair or replacement -- in fact with equipment of that caliber, I'd insist the dealer send BOTH amps back for a complete inspection. I say that because the problem could very well be that one of Lamm's OEM suppliers provided a batch of defective parts, and Lamm might want to replace a few parts in BOTH amps, so you might as well get it taken care of once and for all. Trust me, I've been through this exact same scenario with ARC, Levinson, Martin Logan. It happens a lot, unfortunately. And if you send in just one amp, than as soon as you get it back, the other one will crap out! It's a COSMIC RULE! Also, remember to ask for an extension of your original warranty period.
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There's either a bad electronic part or a bad connection in that one amp. Have the dealer send it back to Lamm for repair or replacement -- in fact with equipment of that caliber, I'd insist the dealer send BOTH amps back for a complete inspection. I say that because the problem could very well be that one of Lamm's OEM suppliers provided a batch of defective parts, and Lamm might want to replace a few parts in BOTH amps, so you might as well get it taken care of once and for all. Trust me, I've been through this exact same scenario with ARC, Levinson, Martin Logan. It happens a lot, unfortunately. And if you send in just one amp, than as soon as you get it back, the other one will crap out! It's a COSMIC RULE! Also, remember to ask for an extension of your original warranty period.
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