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If we attempt to use a capacitor across the line, to suppress high frequency noise, all noise on that bus will be shunted to neutral?
The fact that a .47uf Auricap can often provide startling improvements, is a testament to how crappy our mains power can be.
See:http://www.vhaudio.com/acpowerconditioning.html#auricap
I know what an Auricap is I was curious why Occam would mention them except to warn others against them.Boutique capacitors have nothing to offer.
Extended film construction on film and foil types will have lower inductance and resistance.
However physical size and lead inductance are much of the total inductance for the capacitor and no matter what the construction will not go away.
Multiple smaller units in parallel will divide inductance by the number of units employed and be reduced further by the smaller physical dimensions of the smaller capacitors employed (especially if you consider that some boutique caps are huge for their value).
Instead of the 0.47uf Auricap for $19.00 you might get 100 of the 0.68uf G.E. polypropylenes that Madisound has for $15.00 per 100 units (68uf total, same money but you would have a lot of soldering to do).
Now I politely ask a few questions for the gifted:- Does the above hold any water?- How can you stop other capacitors/ shunts polluting your audio/video power buses?- If a single capacitor can change the sound of a system so profoundly, then what impact will all the "old/low quality" capacitors have connected throughout your house?- Does the noise spread evenly across the multiple shunt capacitors throughout your home?
I mentioned them because I, and others, have yet to find a single capacitor which subjectively works as well in that role. There is a reason that the Good Lord, in Her infinite wisdom, has given us dpdt switches, so that we can make INFORMED EMPIRICAL judgements.
I believe you oversimplified the matter, a bit. The inductances of the paralleled caps are not really in parallel, but rather, the paralleled caps should be viewed, at minimum, with each cap a series R-L-C, which is then paralleled. A very simple Mat-Lab or Spice simulation will illustrate this. Better yet, a sweep with a QuadTech 7600c with the actual components will confirm it. [and yes, I've done this] Given the great price and source for those GE caps that you've so generously shared with us, paralleling them does make sense, but you are simply rescaling that impedance 'V', in a good way. Typical industry practice is to use multiple different value capacitors to spread the attenuation spectrum. I've found that a triplet of .47, .1 and .01uf low cost X2 rated caps (used in concert with inductive components) can equal the performance of a single .47uf Auricap in the same circuit. While that makes tremendous sense from a manufacturer's perspective, for a DIYer, doing a oneoff, dunno.
.....So basically all capacitors across the line interact with other electrical elements. How can we separate the individual caps from others caps. I have noticed a power conditioner with auricaps, with CMC between them. Will this do the trick? Would a Hammond common mode choke do this also.
I have noticed that when I place the Hammond chokes between components, it seems to isolate the two components.
There is nothing like that sinking feeling that you get when you watch that really expensive [what you thought was over rated] film and foil CDE or RelCap literally go up in a puff of smoke when subjected to the surges/spikes typical of an AC line.
For Occam and DAJ: A most common technique of reducing the effect of inductance in a capacitor is to bypass the cap with a smaller non/much lower inductive cap. Why pay big bucks for Auricap when you can bypass? d.b.
Now if we look at the reactance of a .47uf cap typically used as an 'X' cap across 'hot' and 'neutral' in the North American 60Hz power environment.@60Hz Xc = 5,644Ohms@600Hz = 564 Ohms@6,000 =56.4 Ohms
Thanks for the recommendation, but I already have a degree in electronic technology from Wentworth, and over twenty years experience. My texts and on the job experience have already covered most of what you recommended. d.b.