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Do you understand the basic home wiring scheme?
You do not need 40 amps of 120 volt power. Spend the money elsewhere and install one new circuit.
The possibility for creating a ground loop does exist with a circuit to each wall. This is because the length of the runs is different meaning that the resistance of the ground wire will be different and this raising the possibility of current flow between the components if they are connected to each other and to each circuit.
I would consider running only 1 20a dedicated circuit that would include both your red & blue outlets. I'm thinking the amps would be the first outlet, I would share that duplex with an Alan Maher PE(I do believe you have one?) and use your Audience conditioner at the blue outlet to isolate your remaining components from the amp. Basically all you're looking to do is delete household usage from your system's power circuit. I wouldn't make it any more difficult than that,, especially considering you are already happy with what you now have and not looking to solve issues. Why create any? Cheers,Robin
Help!! I don't know any of this stuff...just that I'd like to be able to feed my amps more juice, if needed. Would a 20A line that feeds all these source and amp components be a major step forward from 15A, or am I better off rolling the dice on the ground differential issue and having two lines (the original 15A for the right wall and a 20A amp line for the front)? Any opinions are welcome.
Do you understand the basic home wiring scheme? … If you want an isolated ground, hunt around for an electrician that knows what you're talking about. This is not an item every residential wire-puller will be familiar with.
Quote from: ted_b on 28 Jun 2008, 10:13 pmHelp!! I don't know any of this stuff...just that I'd like to be able to feed my amps more juice, if needed. Would a 20A line that feeds all these source and amp components be a major step forward from 15A, or am I better off rolling the dice on the ground differential issue and having two lines (the original 15A for the right wall and a 20A amp line for the front)? Any opinions are welcome.The prevailing audiophile wisdom regarding dedicated power lines is to run one or more 120V/20A lines with individual breakers on one hot leg and put all the major household appliance circuits on the other. The idea is to segregate the pristine audio components from the dirty appliances but all it does is unbalance the breaker panel and reduce the efficiency of the power transfer from the grid. So, how does the audiophile method of segregating the circuits lead to clean power? It doesn’t. While the hot wires are segregated, the neutral wires from all the circuits are tied together on the neutral leg and that is where most of the noise gets transferred from one circuit to the next. The solution is obvious once you think about it. I’ve even seen it mentioned in this circle on several occasions. But because you have expressed your desire to be uninformed, I’ll say no more.
Quote from: KS on 28 Jun 2008, 10:56 pmDo you understand the basic home wiring scheme? … If you want an isolated ground, hunt around for an electrician that knows what you're talking about. This is not an item every residential wire-puller will be familiar with.Do you understand the basic home wiring scheme? There is good reason for residential wire-pullers to be unfamiliar with 'isolated ground' because not all residential electric codes require metal conduit and metal boxes which are a prerequisite for isolated grounds. If all the outlets are in plastic boxes and the wiring is naked Romex, exactly what are you isolation the ground from?
Quote from: jb on 25 Jul 2008, 09:39 pmQuote from: KS on 28 Jun 2008, 10:56 pmDo you understand the basic home wiring scheme? … If you want an isolated ground, hunt around for an electrician that knows what you're talking about. This is not an item every residential wire-puller will be familiar with.Do you understand the basic home wiring scheme? There is good reason for residential wire-pullers to be unfamiliar with 'isolated ground' because not all residential electric codes require metal conduit and metal boxes which are a prerequisite for isolated grounds. If all the outlets are in plastic boxes and the wiring is naked Romex, exactly what are you isolation the ground from?Whoa. The original poster brought up the idea of different-than-usual grounding, and I just said to find an electrician that knew his stuff. If that wrong, I erred by recommending that. I do understand basic home wiring and therefore, again, recommended a more knowledgeable licensed electrician.
Note to ted_b: If you don’t know anything about electricity and don’t want to learn, don’t read this post. It will just add to your confusion.Why do you guys make everything harder than it has to be? As I described, neither dedicated 120v lines nor isolated grounds guarantee isolation from noise generated by other circuits and they most certainly do not isolate the noise created by your own audio equipment. See http://www.equitech.com/articles/overview.html.As I see it, the ideal way to power your gear is to use a 240v line from the breaker box to the equipment area and one or more balanced transformers, with electrostatic shielding and a bifilar-wound secondary, to step down the voltage to 60-0-60. That way the power transfer is balanced all the way from the utility transformer to your components’ power transformers avoiding all the problems associated with the neutral and ground wires.If you value the testimony of other audiophiles, see http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/frr.pl?raccs&1054872863&read&3&4&. That installation is excessive but with careful shopping and a little DIY you can achieve at least 99% of the benefit at less than 10% of the cost. I’ve seen a nice Q-in-a-box for about $500 and lower quality transformers cost a lot less.If you already have a dedicated 120v, most jurisdictions allow 120v lines (hot-neutral-ground) to be converted to 240v (hot-hot-ground). Consult a licensed electrician in your area. Otherwise, just use one or more balanced transformers on any 120v line. It’s better and usually cheaper than adding dedicated lines and you can take it with you when you move.
Just curious, if you have no intention os offering a solution that you seem to know,,, and Ted has actually stated in his quote "Any opinions are welcome", then why bother saying anything at all. For all you have to say, you are of no help at all.And I'm not saying I disagree with what you're saying either, i just don't understand why you are unwilling to share your knowledge??
I disagree with your analysis. Balanced transformers, while nice, don't stop any noise from entering the system AFTER the transformer. Thus, your argument of the equipment causing noise STILL IS TRUE regardless of the balanced transformer.
JB, I'm not sure what I said to piss you off so much and have that attitude but whatever the hell it was I apologize.
Quote from: KS on 28 Jun 2008, 10:56 pmDo you understand the basic home wiring scheme? No I don't, KS, and no offense, but I really don't want to.
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