On Sun, 5 Mar 2017 22:22:26 -0500, john gibby wrote: >If I plug my amplifiers in without their ground plug (not a good idea, >I know), I can get rid of almost all of it. Yesno! No recommendation by a remote diagnostics! If ground is required depends on the type of electrical device. A lot of hifi equipment, if not all hifi equipment, does use Europlugs by default. Such gear could be used without risk. There's a difference between an earthed metal case and groundlift by capacitor for the circuit. A well maintained non-moving device of the type that requires earthing, not necessarily is critical, if you remove ground. Both is wrong, just recommending to remove ground completely or to connect by capacitor, as well as the claim that even for non-public private usage removing ground always is critical for non-moving, well maintained gear. The reason to claim that nobody ever should lift ground from grounded devices is reasonable overcaution. Do event engineers check all used Schuko cables, each time they use the cables? However, I also claim you should not remove ground! Perhaps you should try to kill two birds with one stone. Get better latency and audio quality and perhaps rid of the ground loop by buying a pro-sumer audio interface, instead of running a risk or to pay for workarounds or to pay for replacing the mobo, the amp or what ever else. Some troubleshooting you could do: - Are all devices involved in the ground loop are connected to the same main socket? If not, connect them to the same main socket by a multiple socket. - Are all used multiple sockets ok? Replace broken multiple sockets! - Are all used power cables, as well as audio cables, remote control cables etc. ok? Replace broken cables! - Just in case: Reconnect all cables! - Rubric Voodoo: Change the positions of the main plugs. Regards, Ralf _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user