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Guys if you dont mind me chiming in. I have a dedicated electrical outlet to the breaker box just for my stereo. This is off but honest, every time the deep freeze kicks in and or I turn a light on or off in the mud room where the break box is my dac will shut down to red stereo will stop and then come back on. The stereo is in my basement about 15 feet from that room fyi would a BIT help
I do perfectly understand that power conditioners condition (filter) the filthy power signal coming into our audio rooms. I also do understand that why we audiophiles throw away the stock power cords and purchase super duper power cords that are supposed to filter the power signal coming into our audio rooms. If the two devices are performing the same function, why buy both? There may be a cumulative benefit, but is the "marginal" benefit of having both as opposed to having one worth the exorbitant cost? Alternatively, if the power conditioner does its job well, couldn't we just use the stock power cord from the power conditioner to the audio component? All thoughts will be appreciated.
Yes there can be isolated situations with power line problems, but most audiophiles that chose well designed hi-fi equipment should not have to resort to power conditioners or exotic power cords.
Something dangerous to my pocketbook then happened, I started actually listening to those type of products in spite of my belief system. There was no doubt that power conditioning products had the capacity to change the character of an audio system.
very well put. i never sad power conditioning is not helpful. i work in a physics lab and a lot of our sensitive measuring equipment wouldn't functoin right without power conditioning. Im saying power cord doesnt fix anything that is broken, which should be obvious to everyone one except maybe someone who gets his info from the MIT cable brochure.
I have no affiliation with either of these guys, and have zero experience with their products:http://www.stetzerelectric.com/http://www.greenwavefilters.com/But these two as far as I know are the two main commercially available EMI detectors and filters in the US. Note that they deal more specifically with emitted electrical noise, not what's necessarily in the power line itself. Some of it feels like it starts to veer in quackery, but hey that's for you to decide. Numbers and beeping machines make for convincing arguments when you don't truly know the meaning behind them. I don't know of anyone who's tried this stuff or seen how it relates to audio. Who wants to volunteer for the greater good?
No, no, and no. I suggest you edit your post, and I'll edit this one to remove so a blatantly untrue post.This represents a complete non-understanding of how things like mutual inductance, shielding, capacitance, resistance, EMI, etc... Here's something to start your education on the subject.
Its all about signal to noise. To call it high end cables and power conditioners voodoo is silly. Special shielding, air tubes, conductors, special geometries, etc all help.Amps and other gear can help too
Signal to noise is valid but it's about power response. Power response and applying connects to a conductor and what that brings. The best response scenario you will ever find is by taking a power cable hardwired at the amp and then taking the outlet out, cutting off the male prongs on the power cable and tieing the conductors right to house wire. That is your reference scenario Beats anything you can buy. Unrealistic to most but it will tell you what the reference sound is and what you want to attain with a normal cable.