I just measured the drop across the 5.5 foot original power cord on my 1964 Scott 222D Integrated Amp. and found it to be 0.2Volts [120.8VAC at the outlet and 120.6VAC at the circuit side of the power fuse. This is with 18guage lamp cord!
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geoffkait Re. Pop Quiz " How come HDMI cables are directional?" They are not unless they have active circuitry built in to compensate for unusually long runs. ;-) |
williewonka My example of 5.51 amps for a 100 watt amplifier refers to full power operation. If you are operating with the volume control high enough that the amp is being driven into clipping on transient peaks you need a more powerful amplifier, and not a thicker power cord because you are asking the amplifier to whack that drum harder than it is able ;-) |
Sisyphus51 6-13-2018 Not sure you are realizing that if current is only drawn during a small fraction of each 60 Hz cycle, as Ralph/Atmasphere clearly explained in the post I quoted, spectral components are present at vastly higher frequencies than 60 Hz. Which, btw, is the main reason I said in my post earlier in the thread that: Almarg 6-12-2018 Sisyphus51 6-13-2018 Among a number of other vintage pieces I have an H. H. Scott 299C integrated, ca. 1961, that I sometimes use in a second system. 7591 power tubes and a 5AR4 rectifier. Very nice piece. I sometimes use it in conjunction with a 1952 Radiocraftsmen 10 mono AM/FM tuner, the combo producing very lush, rich, and beguiling sonics on FM. Regards, -- Al |
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