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Subject: RE: DAC1 - reversing polarity of live/neutral power connection The connection between the DAC1 transformer and the AC line is balanced. There should be no benefit to this exercise. There should also be no harm because the DAC1 has dual fuses (one on the hot, and one on the neutral. But, be very careful because most devices do not have dual fuses, and you can create a fire hazard if you reverse the AC connections to such a device!
There should be no benefit to this exercise.
Andrew,Thank you for that wonderful example showing that a, no doubt extremely competent, engineer can make such a pisspoor scientist.To their credit, the word used was 'should' as opposed to 'is'.Lemme get this straight -1. there is a defined measurable metric, chassis potential that changes with 'plug orientation' (this of course, when both lines aren't switched/fused, the reversal is actually after the fuse/switch), when the ground is temporarily left unconnected. This is simply an objectiv ...
"The audio path is well isolated from the power supply rails, and the power supply rails are bypassed to their own ground system (not to the audio ground reference). The DAC1 will run just fine with lots of ripple and noise on the power supply rails. The regulators (as generic as they are) are orders of magnitude better than they need to be. The DAC1 can actually run with several volts of ripple on the +/- 18 volt rails (we have run this test in the lab) without any measureable change in performance. The +5V and 3.3V regulators are the most critical. Excessive noise on the 5 and 3.3 volt rails can cause jitter. The filter caps on these rails are oversized, and there is no measurable jitter due to noise on these rails. Again, by injecting noise onto these rails, we know what the margins are, and we know that we will not gain anything by changing the regulators.This is also why the DAC1 will not benifit from high tech AC line cords and/or AC line filters.Here is one way to domonstrate this: The DAC1 is designed to operate with AC line voltages as low as 90 VAC. Below 90 VAC the +/- 18 volt regulators will drop out, and AC ripple will increase rapidly as the input voltage is decreased further. At about 80 VAC the DAC1 will gracefully shut itself down by applying each of three digital mute circuits. Just above 80 VAC the DAC1 will opearate normally with no detectable hum or distortion in spite of the fact that it is operating with the +/- 18 V regulators in a drop-out condition. At 80 VAC there is about 3 Vpp AC ripple on the +/- 18 V rails. The only negative impact on performance is that the ripple reduces the headroom of the analog outputs. Normally the DAC1 can deliver +29 dBu to the XLR outputs. When the power supply is out of regulation, the maximum output level is reduced to about +27 dBu."John SiauDirector of Engineering
Paul, the response was from John Siau who is a real electronics engineer. ...
Audioengr, are you saying there are ground loop issues with the DAC1 specifically? Or is "hum problems" a description of something else entirely? I haven't noticed any ground loop issues with my system using a coaxial connection. And with the optical connection they wouldn't be possible, would they?
The DAC1 can actually run with several volts of ripple on the +/- 18 volt rails (we have run this test in the lab) without any measureable change in performance ...... Again, by injecting noise onto these rails, we know what the margins are, and we know that we will not gain anything by changing the regulators.
This is also why the DAC1 will not benifit from high tech AC line cords and/or AC line filters.