At turn on, the amplifier have to stabilize. During the process which takes a few hundred milliseconds, the amplifier dumps DC into the speaker. Not 80 volts, but a significant amount. Once everything is stable there is no (less than 50 millivolts) of DC offset on the output. My relay board does not directly solve the offset problem. Instead, It delays connecting the amp to the speaker for a short time. A similar event occurs when the amp sis turned off. When the main capacitors discharge, the amp becomes unstable and dumps the remaining DC into the speaker. Depending on the amp it can be a small thump, or a louder pop. The relay board instantly disconnects the speaker so it doesn't see the DC.
A White Oak driver board is as stable as it gets. But it can't totally eliminate the pop, thump, surge or whatever term seems to apply. If this is a new condition there is a possible problem withe the board or outputs. Check the DC offset per the W/O directions.