Mother of All Ground Loops


Hoping somebody out there has had something like this happen and can help a brother out.

I have owned for the past year Odyssey Stratos Mono Extreme SE amplifiers.

Recently, in an effort to upgrade my system, I got a great deal on a custom Response Audio preamp.

I waited for it to arrive, hooked it up, and there was only the faintest sound of music coming through it.

I then went to make sure that the interconnects in the back of the unit were okay, and in doing so got shocked.

I immediately panicked and sent the preamp back to Bill at Response Audio (awesome customer service, Bill is truly an honest and awesome guy to work with), who thoroughly checked it for any defects. Nothing. Preamp was in perfect shape.

For the few days that the unit was at Response, I had hooked up my Odyssey amplifiers to a receiver to have some capabilities. Everything worked out okay; albeit the sound was not so hot due to the receiver sucking as a preamp.

I got the Response preamp earlier tonight, and hooked it up the same way again to NO improvement. Hardly any sound, and shocked on contact of anything plugged into the outlet and made of metal.

I decided to hook everything up to an Emotiva amplifier I had laying around, and the preamp worked beautifully!!

So, its obvious that there is some major grounding issue with the preamp and the stratos amplifiers...

The problem is, how do you fix this?

I can't afford right now to replace either at the moment, and the sound is tolerable through the Emotiva, but I can tell a lot is missing...

Is there a cure for this problem?? Is it hopeless?

I fear sending back the amplifiers to Odyssey; at what would likely be several hundred dollars to ship and potentially getting damaged during shipping if there is nothing that can logically be done.

What can one do?

kingdeezie
This can be dangerous!!!Does your home have properly grounded outlets? Check to see if there is a ground lift switch flipped. The Odyssey amps look like they have a grounded plug I think?You could call them and ask if they are. The ones on their website look like they do.
I have no idea about the preamp,or model.If you have a power
strip,try plugging everything in it.Also if you have a digital
multimeter(DMM),you could usually find them at home centers, Sears,for $20 or less for a budget one.Set it to check for 120
volts AC in the instructions.Try touching one probe on each amp or preamp one unit at a time,while the other probe could be touched to something metal that you got shocked on.Don,t touch anything while doing this except the plastic probes to the meter! If you get any kind of a reading over 10 volts from that piece of gear,a screw or something that is bare metal.That piece must be the problem piece. Also do this without any interconnects on them.The bad unit must be grounding through the interconnects. That is one probe touching preamp,the other probe touching a water pipe,furnace register,or anything that may be grounded.If you get a reading over 10 volts to ground or more,that piece of gear has a problem.Don't forget,touch the insulated probes only!This could be deadly!!!There may be 120 volts on one of your units.If your not comfortable doing this,don't! Have any friends that are electricians? Sometimes imported equipment doesn't meet UL standards.I'm leaning toward the preamp having a problem since you never had a problem before.Don't for get the lethal risk!!!Here is a link talking about ground loop problems.Link>>>>>[http://www.trinitysoundcompany.com/grounding.html]
Try checking the 120V supply outlet for turned over hot & neutral connections.

You may need to use a 1:1 line isolation transformer if nothing else.
Here is a outlet tester that should tell you if it is miswired.Don't spend over$10It has 3 lights.
Walmart might even have them.Links>>>>[http://www.acehardware.com/product/index.jsp?productId=3099774&CAWELAID=166610897]link>>>[http://www.thefind.com/hardware/info-gfi-receptacle-tester]link>>>[http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=100062242&catalogId=10053&storeId=10051&langId=-1]
This is not a ground loop. Follow Hifitime's good advice. If you are getting shocked, then there are significant stray voltages "floating" around somewhere. Be careful and if you have any doubt about what you are doing, call an electrician.