Bad Hum Coming Through Amp, What Happened?


I've been running a Primare I21 amp for over a year now, and have been quite happy with the fact that there is no audible hum that comes through the speakers at any volume output. Out of the blue a couple of weeks ago, a nasty hum has started to emit from the amp through the speakers, audible starting at 20-25% of the volume output and louder as the volume increases. I've changed AC receptacles to a Cryo Hubbell one, I've upgraded my power conditioner, and I've switched the stock power cable to a Magic Power cable (which makes the hum even louder).

I am only using 2 of the 4 inputs on the amp, CD and Line 1 (turntable). The hum only occurs on the inputs that have something plugged in to them, and the hum goes completely silent when switched to an input that doesn't have anything connected to it. I've tried rolling the other components to the other inputs (the hum followed the components), and have tried the upgrade power cable on both of the components (no change). The hum occurs whether the components are off, on, or in standby.

What happened here? How do I make this hum go away? It's driving me crazy! Is there something inside of the amp that can be replaced/upgraded to kill this problem? Thanks in advance!

I posted this in Misc Audio last night, sorry for the double post! I realize now this was a better spot for the question, and I can't seem to figure out how to delete my other post.
maha0098
I use a piece of electrical or teflon tape to cover the grounding plug on the IEC of the equipment. That way, you are not introducing a cheap cheater plug into the electrical path.
I have used those ground cheater plugs before & they work great. Does anyone know the downside of using them if any?

Aside from the additional contacts which are introduced into the ac path (which could be eliminated by following Rtn1's suggestion), I think that the one downside would be the fact that the safety benefit of having a safety ground on each piece of equipment is lost.

However, assuming that at least one piece of equipment in the system does not have its safety ground defeated, and that should generally be the preamp or integrated amp, the chances of a problem resulting would seem to be extremely remote. The only scenarios I can envision where a problem would result are:

1)A piece of equipment that is being connected into the system is plugged into the wall through a cheater plug, before the interconnects to the rest of the system are connected. That component has an internal short which causes its chassis to be electrically "hot" (i.e., at 120vac potential). The user connects an interconnect cable to it, and then simultaneously holds the shell of the rca connector at the other end of the cable in one hand while touching the chassis of a grounded component with the other hand. He will receive a shock. Or, similarly, the user plugs a component with a hot chassis into the wall before connecting it into the system, and simultaneously touches its chassis and some grounded object.

2)A component with its safety ground defeated develops an internal short causing its chassis to become electrically hot. All of the interconnects (probably two, for left and right) between that component and the rest of the system are defective in such a way that their shields have an abnormally high resistance (say 10 ohms), but the shields are not completely open. High levels of ac current would be conducted through them, that would cause them to overheat but would not be sufficient to cause the circuit breaker to trip.

As I say, the scenarios in which a problem would result are pretty far-fetched.

Regards,
-- Al
Rtn1, my Sunfire poweramp has 2-prong connector and everytime I try to touch any of my equipment pieces I grab a great piece of the static charge especially during the dry seasons or winter when heater is always on. So figure to have the same with cheater plugs.
Rtn1, my Sunfire poweramp has 2-prong connector and everytime I try to touch any of my equipment pieces I grab a great piece of the static charge especially during the dry seasons or winter when heater is always on. So figure to have the same with cheater plugs.

As long as at least one of the interconnected components has its safety ground connected, the chassis of all of the components will be at ground potential. So the static discharge you feel would be due to the static voltage on your own body discharging to ground (static buildup being at its worst in dry wintertime conditions, and especially if you have been walking on carpeted surfaces). The same thing would happen whether or not cheater plugs were used on some components, as long as at least one component has a 3-prong plug which is not defeated.

If no components have 3-prong plugs, or if the safety ground is defeated on all components (which are situations that should be avoided, as I indicated above), then the chassis can "float" to substantial voltages which could cause a shock (typically a mild one).

Regards,
-- Al
Longshot and maybe some help....long term.
Go to home multi-mart and get an outlet tester. Not one of the 'does it have voltage' types, but one which will show various hookup faults, including hot to neutral or ground reverse and various 'opens'.
They are cheap and should be in anyones parts box who has any work done on there power.