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In Reply to: RE: Dirty dedicated line? posted by FrankC on May 04, 2012 at 13:03:45
It is a very good idea to place the audio breakers on the same phase to avoid grounding issues.
As for noise on the dedicated lines,how are the breakers arranged vis a vis the others? I noticed in my home, normally the heavy current draw appliances are located closest to the incoming line. In other words, the heater, oven, AC, etc, are placed at the top of the breaker box. I had the breakers rearranged and placed my audio breakers closer to the incoming line and that made an audible difference.
Stu
Follow Ups:
No passive line conditioner will entirely remove all noise. IMO that is why your noise harvester is still blinking downstream of the Soloist. Dedicated lines will help mostly with reducing/eliminating voltage drop and some interaction between components, but that's about it. With all circuits in parallel on the same 120V leg, any noise present on one branch circuit will infiltrate the other(s) to some degree.
At some point along the pursuit of perfect power for our audio gear might we ask "just how acute is my hearing?" How many times might that several thousand spent on audio equipment upgrades be best applied to better hearing aids?
"At some point along the pursuit of perfect power for our audio gear might we ask "just how acute is my hearing?" How many times might that several thousand spent on audio equipment upgrades be best applied to better hearing aids?"
Exactly!
I wonder my self sometimes? I'll be happy watching tv and then I'll put my glasses on and it's so much clearer. I'm 43 now and this is my first pair of glasses.
I do wonder if my ears are maybe like my eyes, (out of focus)only there seems no way to tell..
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