Hi everyone! Sorry for the long delay in updating, I had a few days out camping/hiking that was bookended on either side by intense work situations that I needed to put all of my attention into.
So, since I last posted, I regrettably haven't made much progress in resolving things.
When my landlord heard that I'd had an electrician over, he insisted on bringing his own electrician over just to double check everything for me. Everything checks out, the wiring is actually much more modern than the rest of the house, and the ground is definitely good. I feel pretty satisfied that if there is a problem with something, it is not the wiring in my home. I had a back and forth with Rex, the audiophile oriented electrician someone linked earlier in the thread, and that seemed to be his conclusion as well. I also got my own outlet tester, and no problems detected anywhere.
I did try lifting the ground with a 3->2 prong adapter, it made absolutely no change.
I also tried shorting the two input RCA jacks (something that Rex and people in the Klipsch thread suggested is important to accurately characterize the hum), it made absolutely no change.
Steve asked me to send him a video recording of a decibel meter recording the room with the amp off then on. I obliged, and he replied that he really thinks that there's nothing wrong with the amp, and that this is just the unfortunate consequence of the super high efficiency of my speakers. He also suggested that speaker placement and room acoustics could be contributing to the problem -- but fwiw, the hum is bad anywhere in the room, and not any worse at my listening position. Room is 400 sq ft.
I've gotten confirmation from someone over at the Klipsch forums that they had the SEWE300B and tried pairing it with ~100 dB speakers. He troubleshooted the situation with Steve and it seemed like they came to the same conclusion, and he ended up selling the 300B.
Quote:Yeah, I have also wondered about this because I've had both UFOs and UFO25s and they were/are silent. Heat death of the universe silent. Steve says the 120 Hz hum spec for a UFO25 is -58 dB, relative to some signal level, lets say 1 watt. So if you have 100 dB speaks that makes the hum 42 dB @ 1 meter. If your speakers are 90 dB that makes it 32. You don't say (or I missed) what kind of speakers you have. I also wonder if you have calibrated your iphone dB meter? My understanding is the meter is pretty good, but it needs to calibrated if you want to trust the actual numbers. I don't have any answers, esp. if you have thoroughly investigated your power. What about tubes, esp. the rectifier? They can matter too. It also may be some builds are just quieter than others, although I have no technical justification for that.
When I hear something like this, it gives me pause/hope. The hum I get from my pair of UFO25s, although ~3dB less than what I get from the 300B is definitely still unbearable (mid-50 dBs at listening position). But then, James, your speakers are ~94.5 dB, and that is a huge difference. Even so, though, I wouldn't expect "heat death of the universe" silent even at 94.5 dB efficiency, given what I'm experiencing at 105. Indeed my 95 dB Zu DW6s have faint hum at listening position when hooked up to the 300B. But I actually haven't ever tried the DW6s with the UFO25s. I'll try that when I get home on Monday!
Again I really appreciate everyone's suggestions and investment in helping me troubleshoot and understand what's going on. At this point it seems like we're trending towards certain Decware amps (300B, UFO25) not being a correct match for anything around 105 dB efficiency (and anecdotally maybe the 300B isn't a good pairing for even 100 dB?). If we do determine that this is true, this is really good information to be out there for anyone on the waiting list who has been planning on pairing the 300B with La Scalas and Klipschorns (I've spoken to a couple already), and it gives them an opportunity to re-think their plans!
I feel like I've tried all of the troubleshooting suggestions people have put forth so far except for balanced isolation transformer. But I'm still open to trying things and if anyone has any other suggestions I'm happy to hear them

(also, again, for anyone that's still suggesting ground loops, I think I have pretty conclusively ruled that out: the hum is exactly the same even if there is no input to the amp, and the amp is the only thing plugged in to power -- feel free to let me know if this doesn't rule it out!)