Up late last night contemplating the inevitable Old Spice and ugly neckties coming my way this holiday season, I came upon this thread and many like it, strewn hither and yon through cyberspace like wanton temptresses beckoning for my attention.
I'm easy; my expensive ac cords and dedicated line have long since convinced me of the benefits of quality power. I'm not sure at what point I became suspicious that my lowly Hubble may be inadequate but I slowly came to see that, in the grand scheme of things, the cost of a Furutech GTX-D (g) was modest compared to the potentially beneficial effects it held for my entire system.
So, after a large swig of Koolaid, I placed the order. Wish me luck.
Make mine Hubbell hospital grade. Money spent above and beyond is....let's just say questionable..
http://www.grainger.com/product/HUBBELL-WIRING-DEVICE-KELLEMS-Hospital-WP141555/_/N-1z0dsr7?s_pp=false&picUrl=//static.grainger.com/rp/s/is/image/Grainger/5A084_AS01?$smthumb$
Make mine Hubbell hospital grade. Money spent above and beyond is....let's just say questionable..
http://www.grainger.com/product/HUB...m/rp/s/is/image/Grainger/5A084_AS01?$smthumb$
It's all cumulative. Just sticking some AC outlet in the wall with no forthought, the only advantage you'll have is maybe those audiophile powercables won't fall out. If you did what I did:
1. Have a custom made cable run from the street to an Equi=tech wall cabinet with separate runs for L/R channels and keeping analog and digital equipment off the same line.
2. Separate grounding rods into the earth and all cables behind the wall no closer than 1' running parallel
3. 10/3 audiophile UL approved in-wall cable
4. Connecting the in-wall cable to the outlet by crimping/soldering with gold spades
5. Making sure you pay attention to details
You will never get your utility company to make changes to their infrastructure for the benefit of the audiophile. Thus, the best you can do is make everything 1st class from your meter panel on. Odd coincidence: my power is out today due to a storm, but I am enjoying great sound from my system because I have a 9Kw standby diesel generator, and optimized power delivery to my system, from my meter panel. I installed the generator years ago because I live in the boonies where we have frequent outages, and are the last to be restored.And if you need to improve all the way to the street to get a noticeable improvement from an upgraded outlet, wouldn't it logically follow that you need to keep going? At what point do audiophile-quality components in your power source get better performance? The outlet? The circuit? The house? The hydroelectric damn 100 miles away?
Tim
You will never get your utility company to make changes to their infrastructure for the benefit of the audiophile. Thus, the best you can do is make everything 1st class from your meter panel on. Odd coincidence: my power is out today due to a storm, but I am enjoying great sound from my system because I have a 9Kw standby diesel generator, and optimized power delivery to my system, from my meter panel. I installed the generator years ago because I live in the boonies where we have frequent outages, and are the last to be restored.
Of course not. That's the point. At what point do audiophile-quality components in your power source get better performance? The outlet? The circuit? The house? The hydroelectric damn 100 miles away?Tim
And my point is, maximize the quality of everything you can, back to the panel. It matters.
Mains power systems are still in a "magic zone". First there is no established scientific correlation between mains products and stereo sound quality. We just know of a few things that should be avoided because they can cause introduce noise and interference, unfortunately our equipment also generates electrical noise - the job of the mains cabling is not just supplying energy. Second, systems and even preferences are too variable to are allow some systematization of power systems. The only think I am sure is that most power systems and cables have a characteristic sound signature and it seems that the AC outlets are part of it. And third, some systems seem much more sensitive to mains power accessories than others.
So it is natural to have very different opinions - each of us tells about his own experience. All IMHO and YMMV.
It only matters to the extent that it prevents additional noise from getting into the circuit once it enters your house, which is pretty simple and inexpensive to achieve. It does nothing to change the quality of power coming into the house...unless we're talking about filtering...it only moves that power, whatever quality it might be, to your components with greater efficiency. Enjoy.
Tim
Unfortunately it is not pretty simple, as you pretend. Besides noise is also an electromagnetic wave and will not ask your permission to enter your house - the wiring system acts like a giant antenna. And I would love if people could define the "quality" of the power in technical terms.
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