OK, if I undertand correctly the silence during steps 6 and 7 was a "false positive", the monitors went into automatic power-off, correct ?
Your questions:
1- If the monitors are powered from separate/distant outlets, there may be differential noise riding on top of the Ground or Neutral wiring, due to the wiring resistance between the two outlets.
RFI theory and Ohm's law tell us that there is a chance that some of the RFI MAY develop a voltage across that resistance. The RFI will be amplified as a whine (high-pitch sound).
Solution; power the monitors + woofer from the same outlet. You may use an outlet strip, no problemo.
The woofer has no ground wiring to avoid ground loops, which are a common source of hum (not whine) when using separate woofers.
2.Before you spend any money in a different DAC, try the shorted IC or shorted RCA plug trick on both woofer inputs. If the noise disappears, it is coming from your ICs, DAC or PVC. Move the shorted RCAs ons step back in the chain, the another step, to find the culprit. When the noise resumes, the component AFTER the shorted RCAs is the source of noise.
Only TVCs (transformer volume controls) provide galvanic isolation of RFI noise. Autoformer volume controls and potentiometer-based passive preamps do not provide noise isolation. TVC brand / model ?
3. Yes, a ground loop will develop if the cable or cable TV box are connected to your receiver/preamp/amplifier or computer, however, cable TV ground loop generates hum, not whine.
4. I forgot to mention the cable TV box, wireless phones and microwave ovens as possible RFI sources.
You will find the source of trouble with two tricks: shorted RCA and unplugging everything in the house.
In my place, I can hear treble distortion (another form of RFI) when the computer, cable box, DVD or microwave oven are in Stand-by!
Your questions:
1- If the monitors are powered from separate/distant outlets, there may be differential noise riding on top of the Ground or Neutral wiring, due to the wiring resistance between the two outlets.
RFI theory and Ohm's law tell us that there is a chance that some of the RFI MAY develop a voltage across that resistance. The RFI will be amplified as a whine (high-pitch sound).
Solution; power the monitors + woofer from the same outlet. You may use an outlet strip, no problemo.
The woofer has no ground wiring to avoid ground loops, which are a common source of hum (not whine) when using separate woofers.
2.Before you spend any money in a different DAC, try the shorted IC or shorted RCA plug trick on both woofer inputs. If the noise disappears, it is coming from your ICs, DAC or PVC. Move the shorted RCAs ons step back in the chain, the another step, to find the culprit. When the noise resumes, the component AFTER the shorted RCAs is the source of noise.
Only TVCs (transformer volume controls) provide galvanic isolation of RFI noise. Autoformer volume controls and potentiometer-based passive preamps do not provide noise isolation. TVC brand / model ?
3. Yes, a ground loop will develop if the cable or cable TV box are connected to your receiver/preamp/amplifier or computer, however, cable TV ground loop generates hum, not whine.
4. I forgot to mention the cable TV box, wireless phones and microwave ovens as possible RFI sources.
You will find the source of trouble with two tricks: shorted RCA and unplugging everything in the house.
In my place, I can hear treble distortion (another form of RFI) when the computer, cable box, DVD or microwave oven are in Stand-by!