chiming in a little late - got unmotivated at work and stumbled across this thread. this may or may not help. YMMV :
years ago i had a rack that consisted of a DS-5, F2-B, power conditioner and a mesa boogie tube amp. Once everything was mounted and secured in the rack and hooked together, it hummed. not very much, but noticeable and irritating, especially on a rig like that with a series II plugged into it. remove everything from the rack, hum stops. It should be mentioned that everything had a 3-prong power plug that hooked into a good quality grounded outlet strip.
Long story short, it turned out to be a ground loop caused/exacerbated by the 1/4" shielded patch cables combined with the fact that everything was grounded through their respective power cords and by the chassis mounted together in a conductive metal frame in the rack. The solution was a trick i learned from my days in the amp shop. Disconnect and insulate the sleeve from the 1/4" jack from the ground braid on one end only of the patch cable. do this for all of the patch cables that connect from one device to another. try to keep all of the grounded ends on the same device.
the sparkies (of which i'm a card-carrying member) call this hack a ground buster. The electricians (of which i'm also a card-carrying member) who are familiar with the NEC will recognize this phenomena as objectionable ground current. You almost always want a single point of grounding (or earthing as they call it across the pond) or strange stuff will happen.
HTH - back to the salt mines...