0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 15134 times.
A long time ago, the US standard voltage was 110V then 115V or 117V then 120V now it drifting to 125V. I see products with 125V on the label. Some legacy audio equipment may have problems with 125V.Balanced power is expensive, has problems with the electric code and is overrated as a solution.
It's a nice safety check to have an expert look it over, even in a brand new home, as builders always push the trades to finish faster than they'd like and the inspectors don't always check everything either.
I'm suffering from Sunday night/Monday morning syndrome where everything sounds great in the late evenings but has an electronic hash and thinness to the sound during heavy A/C use times. Rather than taking the "let's demo products until I find what fixes it" approach, I'm wondering if there are ways to test for the issue I am having so that I may have a good chance of picking a conditioner on the first try. I own an Uberbuss currently and am happy with it but it apparently doesn't solve this issue.
Balanced power is expensive, has problems with the electric code and is overrated as a solution.
A vacuum tube amplifier with a poorly regulated or unregulated power supply and no feedback is the worst of all possible worlds. Thermionic emission of the cathodes varies wildly with its temperature. That varies with the square of the current which in turn varies with the applied voltage. Lack of regulation also allows the quiescent operating points of the tubes to drift all over the place while lack of feedback means gain is also unstable. If I were the owner of a store selling these I'd keep them all on a large UPS and the store temperature constant. When the unhappy customer came back with one I'd plug it in and show him that the amplifier is not the problem, it's the rest of his system. That would be the perfect lead on to sell him something else like expensive wires or some other gimmick I could make a huge profit on.
Gee, that was helpful.
It does seem like the line voltage is slowly creeping up everwhere in the U.S. I wonder why?
It's not the content, it's the intent. Yours is always derogatory.