Originally Posted By: K447
’Ground loops’ (and grounding issues in general) can be tricky to diagnose.

Don't say that! wink I've ordered an inexpensive isolator (~$10) just to try it out. I'll start there for an easy fix, but I'll also try your suggestions to test the problem.

Originally Posted By: K447
Does the amplifier have a two or three pin power plug into the wall AC?

Excellent question. I believe it's two but I'll check next time. I'm pretty sure it's a built-in power cord and those usually seem to be ungrounded. It's also not a very high-end model so who knows where they cut corners?

Originally Posted By: K447
Is the subwoofer itself grounded?

Nope and I wouldn't know how.

Originally Posted By: K447
Have you tried non bi-amped mode on the sub amplifier?

I have not! I'll give that a shot. It's not like I need all 200 watts considering the small children who live in the house.

Originally Posted By: K447
Have you tried connecting everything (everything including all things plugged into the other receiver inputs) to the same power bar, into a single AC outlet?

Everything is on a single very long power strip with about 12 outlets on it.

Originally Posted By: K447
Disconnect as much stuff as possible from the receiver. Minimal or no input connections - Play an FM radio for sub-woofer testing

I'll try that, but I only have two inputs as it is (Tivo and Apple TV). I guess it's possible that this is coming in over the coax on the Tivo...
_________________________
Matt