Thanks for the advice. You did understand my problem correctly.
I'm not sure I can take it to a neighbors house because the outputs go through Russound keypads and then to the speakers. I'm not sure I can just connect it to speakers without the keypads, I'll have to experiment with that. If I can, that is a great idea that I hadn't thought of.
I almost sent it to Russound but after it worked perfectly on the inverter I thought the problem must be something wrong in my house. The Russound service guy thought it was a grounding issue in my house.
I'll keep trying and let you know if/when I get it figured out.
I did not realize this was part of a whole house system. They are the sort of systems I run miles and miles from.
I have been on the Russound site, and is typical of these sort of outfits, there is very sparse meaningful technical information, and no important details. I tried to watch one of their videos, but it locked up my computer, so obviously this is poor job, which is not encouraging.
I thought their website lousy, useless and entirely conceived by the marketing boys. However I have the impression that the switches communicate via the mains. Did I correctly glean that in the midst of all their garbage. If that is so, then those types of systems are a nightmare, and easily upset. They can lead to all of the problems you are experiencing and worse.
If I have gathered correctly that this system is using house wiring to send communication, then this part of your system goes to the top of the list as prime suspect.
If you have some speakers you can connect directly to the amp without going through the switches, go ahead and do it. I have a feeling the amp will not hum into speakers not part of the switching system. If it does not hum you have your answer and the service guy needs to sort it out.