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
Ding ding ding...
we have a winner.

Thanks to Al and MEtro04
I calibrated meter as per Als instructions, and touched the wires to AC cover screw as per metro.
red wire, the one that arked, reads 0 resistance..
black lead didn't move.

So red wire got nailed or screwed in wall.
and based on what metro said, that could have shorted my receiver input circuits... unreal...

live and learn, should have hired a better low voltage guy that properly protected the wires in the wall... I didn't like the way he left them exposed around studs... I should have covered them with some cheap metal strike plates...or he should have...that guy is getting reamed on Yelp.
Metro gets all the credit. All I did was to describe how to use the meter.

Glad the mystery is solved!

Regards,
-- Al
I found this thread interesting to read.

Riasillo,

I do have a few questions, curiosity I guess.....

On way to get a meter to test wires.
I do think the wire got compromised . Low volatage guy did his thing, then electrician did his, then sheet rock guys.
Riasillo
Electrician did his job?

What all did the electrician do?

New branch circuits? How many?
Extend from existing wiring only?
Type of wiring used? NM-B, Romex? Conduit and wire?
How did the electrical pass through the studs?
Please be specific as possible.


If I hook up speaker to power amp and receiver to either of my amps from any pre out, plugged into different outlets with nothing else attached, volume on zero = very loud buzz... very loud... none of the pre outs are working right.independent of anything else attached.
Riasillo

"plugged into different outlets with nothing else attached, volume on zero = very loud buzz... very loud..."

Outlets on the same 120V circuit?
Outlets on different 120V circuits?


I calibrated meter as per Als instructions, and touched the wires to AC cover screw as per metro.
red wire, the one that arked, reads 0 resistance..
black lead didn't move.

Are the wall studs metal?
A drywall screw through the jacket of the speaker cable and piercing the red conductor wire would indeed bond the wire to the metal stud.

Assuming the electrical receptacle outlet box/es are metal this would bond the safety equipment branch circuit/s equipment grounding conductor to the metal studs.
Thus the shorted reading you got with your meter.

live and learn, should have hired a better low voltage guy that properly protected the wires in the wall... I didn't like the way he left them exposed around studs... I should have covered them with some cheap metal strike plates...or he should have..
Holes for cables, wires, that pass through studs should be back from the surface of the studs
1 3/4" to protect the cable from physical damage from a drywall screw.

Where studs are notched or the holes for cables are less than 1 3/4" from the surface a steel plate of at least 1/16" shall cover cable, wire, to protect the cable from damage of a drywall screw.

Cables, wires, that pass through holes in metal studs shall be protected from damage by bushings or the like.


So red wire got nailed or screwed in wall.
and based on what metro said, that could have shorted my receiver input circuits... unreal...
07-22-12: Riasillo


That still puzzles me...... Output of a power amp ya....

Damage a separate connected preamp? Maybe Al could expand on that.....

One thing for sure I would not connect any new equipment up until everything including the electrical power is checked out. At the very least pick up one of these and check each receptacle for correct wiring and proper AC polarity.
Jim
Damage a separate connected preamp? Maybe Al could expand on that.....
Hi Jim,

Assuming that both components have 3-prong power plugs, as you realize the short would result in a direct connection from the "hot" output terminal of the amp to the chassis of both components. What happens from there is obviously hard to predict without knowing the details of the grounding configurations of the components, and other aspects of their design. But depending on the impedances between the chassis of each component and their circuit grounds, some fraction of the current flowing from the amp’s “hot” output terminal will find its way back to the amp’s circuit ground via the Onkyo receiver (being used as a preamp) and the return conductors of the cables connecting the two components. One conceivable scenario would therefore seem to be that a feedback loop is created from the amplifier's output to some upstream circuit point or points, via the Onkyo's grounds, resulting in a large amplitude oscillation, resulting in damage to circuitry in the Onkyo that is designed to handle low level signals.

Or something like that :-)

Best regards,
-- Al
To add more fun, and headaches to it, it sounds like Quietrock 530 has metal inside it. It's under "cutting the panel" on page one. I saw this on a home improvement type of TV show.