Hi Brad,
Happy New Year to you too and thanks for posting your impressions.
would not have been able to live with the standard SB2, so your upgrade for me is very worthwhile and I will be placing and order for another modded SB2/3 in the very near future.
Thanks! Glad you are enjoying it.
Just for clarification for those who are reading this, Brad had the RWA basic mod package performed on his SB2 (analog output mods only, no RWA battery conversion).
Regarding your observations:
The analog output voltage of your modded SB is most likely lower than that of your Arcam CDP (~2Vrms vs ~1Vrms of the SB). When using the modded SB, you probably already found that you need to turn up the volume a little more than with the Arcam. For A/B comparisons, level matching will be tricky and you'd probably need an SPL meter.
As for power supplies...
Are you sure that your SB2 is only drawing 380mA? This seems lower than I remember measuring it to be (which was close to 1000mA at full brightness for a wireless SB). Is yours a wireless SB2?
What 5V regulator are you using? Have you measured its output voltage under load? What heat-sinking? After playing for a while, is it too hot to touch and what is the output voltage under load? How about for the SLA battery that you are using (size of battery?, output voltage under load)?
For the battery conversion, I use the 12V SLA to feed both a 5V regulator and I also send the 12V into the SB to replace the internal switching regulator that generates ~12V to the regulators that are used for the dac. In other words, I send BOTH 5V and 12V into the SB with the battery conversion mod and am very please with the results in doing it this way.
I use a large SLA that has BIG output current capability...much larger than what a 12V, 1000mA AC power adapter can deliver. However, the SB does not draw more than 1000mA, so having a supply with huge power isn't needed (I use the large SLA for long playtime, NOT because its big output current is needed). It is the cleanliness of the power supply that is most important. The dac chip itself only needs ~ 25mA of current to operate and drive your preamp. Afterall, the SB is not a power amp

I cannot see how huge capacitor banks or anything like that would be needed for increased dynamics, punch, etc. when the dac will only be consuming very low power.... but that is a topic for a later discussion.
Regarding using larger hookup wire, it depends on how long are your wire lengths. With the SB ON, you should measure the 5V at the input to the SB as well as at the output of the 5V regulator. How much of a voltage drop are you getting? If the voltage drop is significant, use thicker wire (which will have less series resistance).
Also, is your switch rated for the current that you are sending through it? Is there voltage drop across the switch?
Keep us posted!
Hi George,
Good idea! ....especially if noise from the AC line is contaminating the battery circuit via a shared ground...
Cheers!