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I agree that the Jensens are not all that cheap (140.00), BUT, considering the prices audiophiles pay for interconnects that results are dubious at best, would argue this gives a good return on investment.
Just to be clear, adding a transformer to the signal path can only degrade the quality, and never improve it. I'm a huge fan of Jensen transformers! But the only reason to get an audio transformer is if you have a problem with hum. So it's not a "tweak" in the usual sense. It's really a problem solver.--Ethan
Agreed. Rather than risk money on power conditioners, which isn't guaranteed to fix the problem, I always recommend people pick up a Jensen instead.
Many modern systems (espcially ones where there is a SAT or cable TV input) often have some hum level included as part of the analog signal.
Ground loop problems are more common now than ever. The one thing that I know gets rid of it is the Jensen transformers.
The other thing is proper grounding of the offending component.9/10 it is your cable TV feed. Easily fixed by grounding and of the splitter boxes in the line to your main house ground.
When I rearranged my gear and ended up with an AC hum I tried all sorts of things. The Jensen transformer was the only thing that worked. But I was never happy having it in signal path, though I can't say I heard a difference. Then I came across the Ebtech Ground Hum Exterminator. You plug your AC line into it. It works perfectly and nothing is added to the signal path. Plus, at $90 it is less expensive than the Jensen.
Perhaps the isolating and impedance-balancing effects of high-quality line-level transformers, when used properly (i.e. not producing high-levels of hysteresis), can indeed improve matters more than they could harm them?I'd be interested in related comments here from those that use Jensen line-level transformers in their products. For example, Wes Miaw (Neko Audio) posts on this forum; to achieve signal isolation and avoid using opamps/transistors, his D100 DAC uses Jensen line-level transformers for audio signal output. I'm believing he must have considered hysteresis when designing the D100(?), but still it would be good to hear from Wes on this...
...RFI is certainly a problem which one might want to address. ... Output transformers are the solution I picked to provide optimal sonic performance and I publish measurements to back this up... The distortion will rise as the frequency goes low, relative to the input signal amplitude, but shouldn't rise in the audio spectrum's high frequencies...
Per your measurements, the output transformers seem outstanding as applied in your D100 DAC - and I see for example in your measurements the comment, that the rise in distortion below 60Hz is due to limitations in the test equipment. Although the test equipment was limited, could measurable hysteresis distortion possibly be occurring in those lower frequencies as well (and does it matter / is it audible)?Also, the D100 DAC (version 1) has a maximum output voltage of about 1 volt - does this also serve to keep potential hysteresis issues fully controlled?