The maximum peak signal voltage you could send into a Crack with the volume control all the way up is 1.5V. If you have 500mV peak of noise current because of a polluted ground, that's not a small voltage at all!
Hmm, interesting. I was thinking it had to be related to 120 AC volts somehow due to the connection to the main power input. I think I need to take a step back and figure out how the audio signal differs from the 120 AC in, and how the ground differs and can affect the audio. I believe the simple answer is the noise is coming from the audio input rather than the power input, therefore the voltage is significantly lower.
I've been doing some experimenting to try and understand the way this noise is introduced. First I've realized there are two noises:
1. Can be heard with nothing plugged in but the headphone and power, but I have to turn the volume way up. It's a constant buzz that is audible after about halfway, more present in the left side. I'm going to guess this is either a ground loop buzz, or there are some weak solder joints. I think the ground loop occurs when nearby stuff is plugged into a different outlet or something? This amp is on top of a PC and next to a monitor, which are all plugged into the same power conditioner. I don't really know enough about this to determine much about it.
2. Needs a signal into RCA.
2a. If I connect them and touch my fingers to the other side I get a buzz, I'm guessing this is a ground loop caused by my body.
2b. When plugged into my DAC output I get intermittent little buzzing, similar to the cell phone interference sound, but lacking a distinct pattern. The DAC is powered via laptop currently, which runs on battery and is charged by the same outlet, but not on a power conditioner. The sound is present regardless of the laptop being plugged into an outlet, guessing this is something related to the battery of the laptop sending something over the 3.3V USB powering the dac.
2c. When I plug the interface into my main PC USB, the noise is drastically reduced in volume. This PC is plugged into the power conditioner. I'm guessing here, it's the same 3.3V sending noise, but due to a better PSU installed in the system it's more stable.
I've been reading up on ground loop hum, and will continue to try and learn more about this. It's one thing to know how to install a fix for noise, it's another to understand why it fixes it. I'm very interested in the why of it all. Thanks for the info on this.
I just got the pair of rectifiers today for this mod, going to install them after work.
BTW: The longer I use this amp the more I am enjoying it. Sometimes the bass notes hit so nicely, I'm extremely happy with this amp and have greatly enjoyed building it myself. The active community on these forums is a very nice bonus to it all.