0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic. Read 38443 times.
Do I need Power Conditoning?
The ultimate solution is called a double static conversion UPS. You're looking at thousands. It deals effectively with all nine of them.
I am a big fan of my Liebert GXT2-3000 / 120v double conversion UPS. These can be picked up for fairly cheap on eBay.
To me, one way you can tell if you need power conditioning or not is if you suffer from Sunday-night/Monday-morning (SNMM)syndrome. Sunday night, your system sounds warm and wonderful; Monday morning it sounds cold and uninvolving. Same piece of music. I had SNMM syndrome before I installed a Running Springs (RS) conditioner. Now I don't. Simple as that. I have, on occasion, rechecked its effectiveness by removing it from the system, but I immediately notice the difference and put it back in.
The honest answer is probably not. At most you need an MOV to protect your equipment, in fact every electrical device in your home from damage due to overvoltage resulting from spikes and surges. Generally power supplied from the power company is as good as you will get from anything you buy. If you have very expensive audio equipment it should have its own well regulated power supply that will filter out any noise on the AC line including RF anyway. All electronc devices operate on DC and one job of the power supply is to filter out ripples and spikes. That's what the large electrolytic capacitors in them do. If you have less expensive equipment then you wouldn't benefit from it either.Electrical disturbances fall into 9 categories. Ask the people trying to sell you a power conditioner which ones their product will deal with, how effectively, and which ones it won't. If you have real power problems such as overvoltage, periodic brownouts, a cheap conditoner will not work. That is a far more expensive problem to correct. The ultimate solution is called a double static conversion UPS. You're looking at thousands. It deals effectively with all nine of them. Don't waste your money, buy something of real use to you instead. It's just another scam. BTW, if you want to test such a device other than by looking at manufacturer's specifications (real ones like Eaton and Liebert/Emerson will give you complete specs, they have nothing to hide and nothing to gain from hype) the only way is to compare performance when the equipment is on line to the way your equipment performs when it is bypass. Unless a bypass circuit is built in, building one yourself can be very dangerous unless you know exactly what you are doing and it will not be covered by UL. That means you will be responsible for any accident from it.
I hate to disagree here, but I review really high end gear on a regular basis and I've yet to hear a piece of gear that has not sounded better plugged in to a Running Springs box, and even a number of highly skeptical manufacturers that swore up and down that "their gear didn't need line conditioning" changed their mind after a 30 sec demo.This is some of the worst advice I've ever heard.And, if you don't believe me, grab a RSA box from a dealer for a demo.
My understanding is that a UPS tends to be noisy, i.e. they introduce a low level hum. Some of them have fans. If that's true, wouldn't the use of a UPS be counterproductive to achieving a black background?
"I review really high end gear on a regular basis and I've yet to hear a piece of gear that has not sounded better plugged in to a Running Springs box"And I design power distribution systems for among other things some of the highest tech labs in the world including electron microscopes that magnify objects by hundreds of thousands of times their actual size and other instruments that photograph individual atoms. If that equipment doesn't require it why does the crap the high end audio industry sells need it? Can't they figure out how to design a power supply that's stable enough and sufficiently immune to noise so that it functions properly?
Actually if you talk to the guys at Shunyata and RSA, they've both sold their products to the medical industry for that purpose...
I wouldn't have a stereo without power conditioning because I just wouldn't care to listen to it that much. I consider it the cornerstone.You don't need it, but why on earth would you want to listen to a stereo without it?
It is the cornerstone of a low fatigue system you actually want to listen too.