I guess it depends on how we define a ground loop problem, but I kind of feel it’s related since it only occurs when there is a loop in the grounding, but disappears when the loop is interrupted.
I referred to the AVP and the Hypex amp only, that they likely did not cause the ground loop, and even then I did use the word "may" (anything is possible), sorry for not being specific.
To me, there is a better chance that the "loop" might have been created elsewhere, likely the cable/connector. As mentioned, did you check to see how your XLR cables are wired at both ends to the connectors and see if they are wired to AES48? If not, it's an easy fix, probably a side cutter will do. If wired correctly, then I don't know what the root cause is, as you have already read Rane and Hypex papers so you also know that one of the common issue is the so called "pin 1 problem" that Hypex referred as entirely self-inflicted (not by you obviously).
Here's a clear diagram that compares the wrong and the right.
Pin 1 Problem
I’m pretty sure they are correctly done yes. At least Apollon (one of my Hypex NC502MP amps) has pretty good reputation for assembly quality. The problem is also there with either my KJF MA-01 or Crown XLS 1502, so I doubt all of them are poorly constructed.
That seems to support my thinking that it could be something else outside of the AVP and the power amp, such as the cables/connectors, but again it is just a may be..
I’ve ordered a
iFi GND Defender to see if that fixes the issue, but it’s annoying regardless
.
That's probably a well engineered product that should work without forgoing safety, but before investing in one, it is easier to eliminate the possibility of an easy fix
if the cable/connector is the cause. In reading the specs, I am not sure if the Defender might limit current, 10 A continuous is not bad but there is no specs for peak current, regardless it won't likely affect audible sound quality issue except under some extreme conditions.
I wish HDMI was galvanically isolated like ethernet is so we wouldn’t have these problems.
That would be nice but may be a tall order as manufacturers won't like the added costs unless they perceive it as really necessary such as widespread complaints. I have had quite a few HDMI AVRs, AVPs, and other HDMI devices, never experienced ground loop issues, though read about quite a few posts by those who did for sure.
And just to bring it back to the AV10 and similar high-end units, I wish they would galvanically isolate the HDMI circuits from the audio circuits, since a quick search will show that this is a common problem. That would be a feature worth paying a premium for!
I would be interested to know if those higher end (price wise at least) products such as those offered by Trinnov, Stormaudio, Focal Astral, Dataset, AudioControl etc., offer such features.