I received my Solaris earlier this week and overall I am very pleased with it. The sonic possibilities seem endless and what's most important, the user interface is just fantastic!
One thing bothers me though:
When my Solaris is powered up, it emits a constant high pitched sound which seems to be coming out of the Solaris itself (not the power supply).
It is not exactly loud, but in a quiet room it is clearly audible and given its very high pitch, I have to say it is rather annoying and for recording and critical listening I have to switch the Solaris off.
I was wondering if anyone else is experiencing this?
To give you a better idea of what I am talking about, I tried to record it.
I found that it can be picked up best by placing a microphone directly above the keyboard:

If you are interested in what this sounds like, you can download the recording here:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/9075306/Solaris ... 0noise.zip
Here is a description of what happens in that WAV-file:
Initially, there is only background noise from the mic and preamp, then, about 3 seconds into the recording the Solaris is switched on. Immediately there is something going on in the higher frequencies. Then, about five seconds later, a consistent high pitched sound appears which persists until the unit is switched off again.
Being curious, I ran the recording through a spectrograph.
First of all, here is what the noise floor of that recording looks like:

There is a spike at about 21 kHz, which seems to be introduced by my recording equipment, so this has nothing to do with the Solaris -- just wanted to make that clear.
Then, right after switching the unit on, For about five seconds there is clearly something going on in the area somewhere around 15.5 kHz. This is clearly coming from inside of the Solaris:

Then, roughly five seconds after the unit has been switched on (about when the "SOLARIS" logo appears on the main display), the pitch changes and now shows a significant spike at 14 kHz:

John, maybe you could bring this to the attention of the engineers. I would of course like to know if there is anything that can be done about this?
Regards,
Christopher