To any studio nerds who'd care to review this tome, I would gladly entertain your suggestions for reducing or eliminating hum in one set of studio monitors.
Here's the story…
= I'm working in my home studio, which is in a new building I built for this purpose last year. The building is located in an extremely remote area, miles from high-voltage power lines, welding shops, industrial parks or the like.
= I have three sets of monitors: Genelec 1032As (with or without a 1092 sub), Westlake BBSM-4s and a Berhitone.
= I’m experiencing 60Hz hum in ONLY my BBSM4s (my self-powered Genelecs are clean as a whistle). These are my only monitors that are not self-powered.
= I have a Alesis RA150 amp driving my Westlake BBSM-4s
= The amp is plugged into the output of my Apogee Quartet (balanced cables)
= The hum is present, even with no input plugged into the amp and does not change when inputs are present (hence, changing cables, adding a hum bucker, etc. are not relevant)
= I am running my entire system off a single, dedicated AC circuit. My building was purpose-built for my studio with a “home run” or “hospital ground” that goes back to building earth from the AC outlet where I power my audio gear. The power to the building was trenched in direct from the pole and not jumpered off my home. No other electrical items (lights, etc.) are powered from the circuit I use for my audio gear.
= I am running high-end speaker cables from the amp to the Westlakes in the bi-wire configuration recommended by the manufacturer (http://www.westlakeaudio.com/Speakers/M ... ction.html, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bi-wiring)
I have tried all the following with no effect…
= Lifting the ground on the amp
= Powering the amp direct from the wall (instead of from a power supply)—lifted or grounded
= Powering the amp direct a separate wall outlet from the rest of my system—lifted or grounded= Powering the amp from three different conditioning power supplies—lifted or grounded
= Changing speaker cables (non-bi-wire)
= Physically re-locating the amp in the room
= Re-routing the power cable to the amp (power and audio cables are running through separate raceways, speaker cables go direct from the amp to the speakers and only cross other cables at right angles)
= Tried different power cables to the amp
= Turning off the lights in the room
= Turning off the breakers for everything in my building except the line that powers my system (i.e. no power to anything else in the building—eliminating the possibility of interference from other electrical sources)
= I even sent the amp in to Alesis for service evaluation and it checked out fine
Again, the hum is present even with no input to the amp, so the usual suspects of ground loops, bad cables, etc. are ruled out… though I have checked all those issues, just the same.
Though I don't claim to be a studio designer or electrical engineer, I have built a few studios and worked in studios all over the country, so I'm not a complete idiot on this, but I've now tried everything I know. Given the above, the only variable that seems to be left (even though Alesis support gave my RA150 a clean bill of health) is to try out another amp.

I would love it if someone out there could point out something obvious (or less-obvious) I've missed.
Thanks!