Strangest problem I've ever had


Ok.
Bought a house.
Paid guy to run wires through the wall for a 3 point system.(too many obstacles & $$ for surround)

Have walls patched and painted. Moved in.
unpacked My Pride and joy B&K 7 channel.

system includes Onkyo sr705, HDMI from cable box to onkyo, connected polk rti12 speakers to B&K with bananas.

turned it all on, incredibly loud buzz snap crackle pop, onkyo shuts off and burnt wire smell fills the air.

Trouble shoot. all wires were hooked up right.
connect speaker wires directly to onkyo one at a time. the farthest one away in the wall shuts off onkyo. I run a new wire on the floor to that speaker. It works.

So it's the wire in the wall, it got compromised some how when the patched wall..?
not so fast.
I have an old kenwood preamp and adcom 2 channel. I hook up "bad wires" in wall directly to kenwood and the speaker works fine. how can bad wire short one amp and work on another???

So then I hook up an RCA pre out channel from the onkyo to the adcom and the same very loud buzz comes on the good speakers.

So the Pre outs on the Onkyo are definitely sending the buzz to both amps... can we assume the Onkyo pre outs are shot.
Million dollar question. Why does the line in the wall short out the onkyo but work on my old kenwood.

So then I test a good speaker line on each output on the onkyo. They all work... I'm doing this with it on, even though I know better... Then I went to connect the bad wires to the onkyo again and I got a spark when I connected the red wire...I've never seen a speaker wire spark off a preamp????!!!!
i've never seen that. I'm going to get a meter and read the line resistance and see if there is a difference with the bad wire.
My concern... If I go get a new preamp, can the bad speaker wire blow it again.
Makes no sense.
That wire was hooked up through the B&K. B&K was connected via RCAs to Onkyo. How could it short the onkyo going back through the B&K.
do we think the onkyo was toasted in the move. If so, how is it that just that 1 line shorts the onkyo and none of the others... too strange
riasillo
You have a shorted wire. You can use an inexpensive multi meter set to ohms to check the resistance between the positive and negative of each speaker wire. If there is no resistance it is shorted (it will either have no connection or a 100% connection, 100% connection = short). Quit using your amps to trouble shoot. Once you know which wire it is then it will need to be fixed or replaced. Better to replace the wire than all your amplifiers.
Quit using your amps to trouble shoot.

Now that is some good advice.
Does sound like a head scratcher though.
It's sounds like you hit your cable with a nail or dry-wall screw when you were patching things up.