I am so conFUSED!
You did NOT just say that! That needs to be saved and put up on a trophy shelf someplace.
I am so conFUSED!
Yes it would be a surprise if the AC power line fuse made a difference.On fuses: first, consider that all the AC power in a component passes directly through the (tiny) fuse element. Is it really that surprising that changing the fuse makes a difference?
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Yes it would be a surprise if the AC power line fuse made a difference.
Consider that the AC is converted to DC in the power supply and stored as DC in large electrolytic capacitors.
Yes it would be a surprise if the AC power line fuse made a difference.
Consider that the AC is converted to DC in the power supply and stored as DC in large electrolytic capacitors.
Yes it would be a surprise if the AC power line fuse made a difference.
Consider that the AC is converted to DC in the power supply and stored as DC in large electrolytic capacitors.
+1!
And because that fuse has nothing to do with the audio signal path.
No, that's just wrong.
The AC power is rectified and then used to create the final amplified waveform we hear. The fuse is directly in the signal path and the analogy of caps to "storage tanks" is just wrong.
As I stated in my previous post, the water analogy is just bad and leads to a lot of misunderstandings. This is one of them.
Speed: While I certainly understand what you are saying, have you seen measurements which show audio frequencies on AC cabling when playing music? Presuming that power supply capacitance isolates the AC line entirely appears to be in error.
Years ago, before I built my own preamp, I had a Sonic Frontiers with 5AR4 rectifier. It arc'ed over and took out the 1st resistor in the B+ supply, fuse did not blow. A year later the power trafo melted down and the fuse did not blow. Luckily I was there both times, as you should be with tube gear, imo it shouldn't be left on.
I've never (knock on wood) had a fuse blow where it actually did it's job as designed, and the circuit breaker in your electrical box will trip as a final fail-safe.
I have started using circuit breakers in my gear, so far a DAC/DSP, 2 preamps, a tube amp and 2 SS amps all have circuit breakers in them, but I might just bypass them too.
Everything is in the "signal path",
indirectly perhaps, directly no.
Totally directly. Amplification is a modulation of the DC signal coming out of the power supply, based on the input signal waveform. That DC is directly connected to your power. Thus, distortions in the DC directly affect the sound.
But the cycle to cycle voltage variation on the AC line is orders of magnitude larger than any possible fuse variation.Speed: While I certainly understand what you are saying, have you seen measurements which show audio frequencies on AC cabling when playing music? Presuming that power supply capacitance isolates the AC line entirely appears to be in error.
If the AC fuse is in the signal path, then all the fuses and circuit breakers all the way back to the power company generator are also in the path.No, that's just wrong.
The fuse is directly in the signal path...............................
So then just what do the electrolytic capacitors do?The AC power is rectified and then used to create the final amplified waveform we hear.
The fuse is directly in the signal path and the analogy of caps to "storage tanks" is just wrong.
Yes, analogy's like that do lead to misunderstandings.As I stated in my previous post, the water analogy is just bad and leads to a lot of misunderstandings. This is one of them.