Power Amps and Power Conditioners, Do you plug in?


Here is my situation. Like many of us I have always believed in plugging my amplifier directly into the wall socket. I have somewhat dedicated line, separate 15 amp line with Hubbell hospital grade outlets, that does not feed off a separate dedicated line. This is because I live in a co-op that has 14 floors and 170 dwellings. It is as isolated as I can get. It is better than what I had before.

I have a Monster HTS 2000 that is plugged into one of the four outlets provided in the dedicated line. I just purchased a Synergistic AC Master Coupler powercord that I am using with a Sim Audio Moon W-5. The powercord is not user-friendly. I cannot plug it directly into the dedicated line because it will not flex to allow me to do so. I plugged it into the amplifier section of the Monster HTS 2000, claimed to be non-current limiting, and gave it a try. There is no doubt that my system sounds more dynamic that it did before.

Am I fooling myself? Am I limiting the ability of my amplifier to perform at its peak? Does anyone else find themselves plugging their amplifiers into their power line conditioners and are getting similar results? Should I use the new power cord with my preamplifier through the power conditioner and plug my amplifier directly into my dedicated line with an inferior power cord?

I look forward to your comments and experiences.

Thank you,
Drew
drewfidelity
I would listen to it with your amp plugged in to the conditioner for about 2 weeks. Then unplugged the amp from the conditioner and plug the amp into the wall and listen to it and see which you prefer.
Depends on the power conditioner and the time of year. My amps generally sound better at all times plugged into my Burmester line conditioner, which was not the case with the line conditioners I had before, but they always sounded better running through any of the line conditioners I have used during the summer months--for obvious reasons.
I would suggest changing the settings every 2 weeks so you will experience differences as all audiofiles need:)
The thing to remember is if 1/2 of your system is plugged into a power conditioner, and there is a component plugged directly into the wall -- you are not protected from lightening on any of the components. You also have no warranty from the protection device manufacturer unless all of the connected components are connected to the conditioner.

BTW, I also have a Monster HTS2000 and I really haven't noticed enough of a difference to warrant not plugging into it vs. the wall outlet.
Thank you all for your responses. The only reason why I am plugging the amplifier into the Monster HTS2000 is because it is the only place that I can plug it into due to the inflexibility of the power cord. It just so happened that I thought I heard a dynamic difference. This may very well be that the new power cord is providing that difference. What I will do is run this for two weeks and then use the original power cord plugged into the wall and see if I hear a difference.