Crescendo BC8000 output drive

Hello. I am currently working on a crescendo bass clef 8k amp. I have a strange fault that I have not run into yet and can't seem to find the root cause. The output section was blown. I removed all the dead components and check for any signs of life with a low current supply. I had nothing. So I changed the output driver board and the 4x tc4452 drivers and powered the amplifier on and had my low side drive square wave on both banks of mosfets. I went to test it again today to finish the amp and there was no longer any drive waves but when I touch my finger on the lpf or the phase shift knobs, I get a low side square wave with my scope on 8.0ms. If anyone can shed any insight on this it would be greatly appreciated. Thank you
 
I had the amplifier powered on idling. It was just powered on by a low current supply. No the output mosfets were not in the board. The output only started the square wave when I touched those parts. As soon as I took my finger away, the square wave went away. It was a 75khz square wave and when I keep my finger on one of those 2 adjustment potentiometers it's there. When I take it away it goes away. When I input a signal into the amp it starts to oscillate but as soon as the signal stops it goes away. This is all with the output mosfets out of the board. I have tried it with and without a load attached to speaker terminals as well. Thank you for the reply.
 
It's odd that you had a 75kHz oscillation with the outputs out of the board. Scopes are notorious for displaying the wrong frequency. Does the 75kHz agree with the display (using the timebase and the divisions on the display to calculate frequency)?

With a 100Hz input signal, what frequency do you see at the gate terminals of the output FETs?
 
With 40hz, 65hz, and 100hz inputs signals, I get those frequency square waves on the gates of the low side. But as soon as the signal is stopped, the wave goes away. I did try to also install a few of the output mosfets for testing and it's the same thing. The only difference is with them in the board, me touching the adjustment pots didn't produce the wave anymore.
 
Yes it is on all the low side gates. I am attaching a picture of the driver board. It has a total of 13 pins.
 

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No. I am going to post a picture of my scope screen to show what is happening when I put a 40hz signal into the amp. The picture is on the drain of the lowside mosfet. It is the exact same for the gate of the high side mosfet.
 

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What if you set the crossover to the highest frequency, set the gain at the maximum and increase the level of the test signal. does it still do this.

Side note, The same signal would be seen on the high-side source. The high-side gate would have a signal that's about 10v greater on the top of the signal.
 
Ok so I turned the amp on, it was idling at 10.5v only drawing about 2.5 amps. I had turned the remote off and maybe 30 seconds later turned it back to get the voltages you asked for. When I did that, the amp sat idling at the same voltage but drawing 3.8 amps. The only difference now is that it started oscillating. The voltage you asked for you meant 2nd pin in starting from the left is -12 volts. If you meant 2nd pin in from the right side, it was -10 volts.
When it started oscillating, it had the perfect square wave on the low side and it was perfect on the high side gate as well.
 
Yes, that's the way that it seems. If I turn it on let it build the rails and let the relays click on. Then turn it off for 5 seconds and turn it right back on, it works perfect. I was thinking, could it possibly be on the initial startup, my 10 amp power supply isn't enough for it to fully turn on and that's why it turns on when there is already partial rail voltages?