MEK, yeah looks that way! :) It was bright when this happened... I
think if it was dark it would have been almost as bright as a camera
flash. (No bad little kids doing bad little things though).

Kent, I tested everything, albeit less than maniacally. Let's assume
yes right now. I could literally pull it out and check every
connection, but I consider it 95%+ certain that the problem is the
mixer.

Maybe the building isn't grounded properly. I live in a super old
building, probably earlier 20th century build, like first quarter ish.
Just a guess, though, I have nothing to back that up.


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Kent wrote:
That's messed up. First off, is the mixer the problem?  I.e. can you
run an IPod, CD Player, etc into your amp and hear sound? Do your
turntables still produce sound (maybe hard to do without a phono
preamp or mixer, but worth checking).

If so, the mixer is kinda shot.  You can try getting it replaced under
warranty from Stanton.  It's weird that you could build up enough
static charge to fry it -- for one thing the chassis is grounded, so
any electrical charge should have gone straight to ground.  For
another, all static-sensitive components (and there really shouldn't
be many) should not be vulnernerable because the path of least
resistance is through chassis ground.

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