Hi Mark;
On my test bench, I am using the wall outlet ground as reference. The ground is several hundred milli-volts away from the neutral, depending on what's drawing current. I am former Theatre sound and projection installer, so understand the star-point grounding necessity. My home theatre rack is has one central ground lug. It is tied to the four-gang outlet box ground. The amplifiers are all mounted with insulating sleeves, washers, and shims. The PL's have always been a PITA to mount! I have been planning to run a direct number 10 ground wire to the hydro ground stake, about a 40 foot length but it hasn't been necessary so far. The system is dead quiet with 3000 watts of amplifier power at the ready.
I don't have access to Hi-pot testing I thought that my test results might give you an idea of the severity of the leakage. As mentioned; both series II amps involved in WOPL'ing are behaving the same. With nothing connected to the amps there is about 60 VAC from the chassis to the wall outlet ground. With the Fluke meter shunted by 1 meg, it drops to about 40 VAC. 10 k shunt drops it to 650 mV AC. My thinking is that grounding the chassis would solve this issue? Maybe just mounting them to the rack without isolation?
After all the output devices were installed, I was anxious to hear the amp produce a sound through a speaker. The amp's only connection to ground was the signal gen, and that was the INPUT ground. I could see this as the issue---huge hum and faint sine wave in the background. I will re-connect everything and try grounding the chassis for another speaker test. I actually had envisioned replacing the 6-32 screw for the single point chassis connection, with a 6-32 long stud to create an external ground connection.....Or running a wire from one of the speaker ground terminals to the rack star-point ground (some contradiction to the amp's internal star-point scheme with that brain-burp).
Just puzzled that no one has had this leakage issue, I will search this forum for anything relevant.
Happy New Year All!
PS; pictured is my quasi-comp 700B driving the mid-range line arrays, to be replaced by one of the WOPL'ed series II's.