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so iff you fuse before the switch (or you fuse BOTH lines), you can do the same, but with the ability to reverse line and neutral for whatever objective and subjective benefits, with a single switch; the center position being 'off'.FWIW
Fusing the neutral and indeed using a double pole mains switch to switch both active and neutral is mainly ro cover the possibility that the electrician was having a bad day when he wired your house and the power point in the wall may have active and neutral transposed.If it only ever saves your life once .....!!!Cheers,Ian
The concept of reversing polarity (or is it phase?) of the conductors in a power cable, and whether it has any impact on the sound of our systems, is an interesting one.Last week I was pottering about testing for the cause of a little hum coming from my speakers. Whilst doing this I also swapped the positions of a couple of my AC cords to see whether I could find even better synergy. In order to make one of the swaps I needed to buy an Aus to US adaptor. This adaptor aligned the power cord earth pin with the earth pin on the other side of the adaptor (ie. reversed polarity) and didn't have a second earth pin socket to allow correct phase. I didn't think it would make any difference, but I was wrong. The front to back layering of the soundstage totally collapsed into a narrow band between the speakers, and the excitement and magic of the music was gone. I removed the adaptor and replaced the short cord with a longer cord of the same type (that already had a US plug and didn't need the adaptor) and everything returned to normal.I know that the 'power cords make no difference' proponents will be rolling around on the floor absolutely p!ssing themselves over this one.....
Let them piss themselves, bro! You and I have heard the difference (I must remember to use the secret "AC afficionado" handshake next time we meet up!! )!!This an essential article, IMO:www.boundforsound.com/tweak.htmIn fact the effect has nothing to do with the AC mains, per se ... simply whether the "right" side of the power trannie is connected to active.Regards,Andy
The concept of reversing polarity (or is it phase?) of the conductors in a power cable, and whether it has any impact on the sound of our systems, is an interesting one.Several years ago I purchased some 'hifi' AC cords with US plugs on them. I placed US to AUS adaptors on them at the wall sockets. What I didn't realise at that point was that positioning of the hot and neutral pins in the US is the opposite of what we have here. Consequently, I fitted the adaptors upside down, thus reversing the polarity. When I found out about the mistake I reversed the three adaptors to maintain correct polarity. Though I can't recall the exact nature of the difference, I did hear a difference ...from memory it was a little more relaxed and a slight hardness to the sound was gone. The adaptors have an earth socket at the top of the adaptor and one at the bottom of the adaptor, allowing you to align the earth pin of the US cord with the earth pin of the Aus side of the adaptor (reverse polarity), or reverse it 180 degrees so the US cord's earth pin is nearest the ceiling and polarity is maintained. When I first got the cords, I temporarily replaced the US plug and adaptor with a quality Aus plug. I heard no difference whatsoever and refitted the US plug as it was a better design for holding the large gauge conductors in place.Last week I was pottering about testing for the cause of a little hum coming from my speakers. Whilst doing this I also swapped the positions of a couple of my AC cords to see whether I could find even better synergy. In order to make one of the swaps I needed to buy an Aus to US adaptor. This adaptor aligned the power cord earth pin with the earth pin on the other side of the adaptor (ie. reversed polarity) and didn't have a second earth pin socket to allow correct phase. I didn't think it would make any difference, but I was wrong. The front to back layering of the soundstage totally collapsed into a narrow band between the speakers, and the excitement and magic of the music was gone. I removed the adaptor and replaced the short cord with a longer cord of the same type (that already had a US plug and didn't need the adaptor) and everything returned to normal. I guess you could argue that it was the change from Aus plug and adaptor to US plug an no adaptor that caused the change. But, due to the fact that I previously heard no difference when replacing a US plug and adaptor with an Aus plug, I don't think so.I know that the 'power cords make no difference' proponents will be rolling around on the floor absolutely p!ssing themselves over this one.....