I will point out.... The amp only gets hot...when pushed very very hard. It seems to be a threshold that
anything below level 27 on the gain tab the amp is absolutely fine
but when I start pushing my entire system to the max for anything over 5 minutes the amp will heat then get hot!!!! and it will not cool down and I have to shut it off.
After reflecting on the issues at hand I have decided that IF I want a quite powerful amp ...don't turn the gain up past 27 (which is really enough juice I just push EVERYTHING TO THE LIMIT).
90% of the time I use the amp normally which is why I absolutely require "quite" functioning of the amp day to day. I realize that with this amp I should be happy and I have adjusted my expectations accordingly. My townhouse's circuits can't handle my electronics anyway so I really shouldn't be pushing everything so hard.
I will post back the results after fixing the short inside of my speaker box. I work 7 days/week so it might take a minute to get back.
This is the official thank you to everyone who gave helpful comments.
This is from the Behringer site-
"2 x 1,200 Watts into 2 Ohms; 2,400 Watts into 4 Ohms bridged operation"
You have said you push the amp at times and I think we need to clarify a couple of things. Your system should be on at least one dedicated circuit. No amp is 100% efficient and many aren't much more than 70%. The EP2500 manual indicates that a 15A circuit is needed for this amp. Not a 15A circuit that's shared by other equipment, though. The Ohm's Law power formula (P=I x E) would show that at 15Atimes 120VAC =1800Watts, so the 2400W rating can't be for continuous operation. Since we don't listen to sine waves, this is fine. When something draws a lot of current, the voltage drops and if the output is to remain constant, the device has to draw more current. More current means the device will run hotter than normal and this may be your problem. I'm not sure you have a short in the speaker.
If you can, use a voltmeter to monitor your line voltage while you use the amp the way you normally do. If it drops significantly, the best thing you can do is install a dedicated 20A circuit for this amp, on the same phase as the rest of the system. Your equipment will be happier and since heat kills everything, your equipment will last longer. Power supply voltage is absolutely paramount if a system is to work as designed. Engineers care about this but marketing departments don't. Marketing says that big numbers are best but they're afraid to tell people that they should install a heavier duty circuit because it may mean the amp's sales could suffer. If someone really wants an amp like this, they should get one but it should be known that it has specific electrical supply demands. If you have a basement under the receptacle used for the system, running a new circuit should be easy enough.