After leaving my system on for 3 days...


...I listened to a CD I'm pretty familiar with, and found that the sound is harsher than it used to be!

I know that there is the arguement that leaving solid-state devices on usually yields better or at least no performance difference, but is it possible that the performance actually suffers?

Before my little experiment of leaving it on for 3 days, I used to turn it off in the night, and leave it on all day during the day. Also, I just purchased a tuner, which I have stacked on top of my CD player, which is on Vibrapods. Perhaps that is the cause. (They say you shouldn't stack)

Or is my system just revealing the real sound from the CDs?

I admit, I will have to go home after work and do some more experimentation before I come to a solid conclusion whether the sound has gotten worse or not. (Perhaps unstacking my tuner from on top of my CDP)

I own the following system:
- NAD C370 Integrated Amp
- NAD C541 CD Player
- NAD C420 Tuner
- IXOS & Monster interconnects
- Monster speaker cable
- B&W DM601S2 speaker pair

Any ideas?
lennychen
Post removed 
interconnects and moving things around isn't the answer...you said you came back 3 days later with the system the same as before except you left equipment on, right?

So the answer doesn't lie in changing things around. You are trying to discover what is the difference now. If you start changing things you will be introducing new variables and you will be hard pressed to understand what has changed.

Isolate the problem. Make sure you have more than one CD to test with, test at different times and be patient. Even if nothing changed, your mood alone could impact things so you want to make sure the change is consistent at a number of times and moods and with a number of CDs you know well. Then if you are still sure there is an issue or the issues is intermittent, I would follow the lead of several other posters and look into electricity control. If you can afford it, get a PS power plant (probably the p-300, $1245 http://psaudio.com/products/p300_overview.asp). If you can get one from a friend or local dealer or I think PS has a 30 day trial period, either way, TRY before you BUY. A lot of money, probably your most expensive piece, but since it will help all 3 NAD units then it is only like $400 a piece. Who knows you might be able to find one used and save a few bucks, just make sure you are getting the most recent model. (But this way you can’t audition it first.)

cd
interconnects and moving things around isn't the answer...you said you came back 3 days later with the system the same as before except you left equipment on, right?

So the answer doesn't lie in changing things around. You are trying to discover what is the difference now. If you start changing things you will be introducing new variables and you will be hard pressed to understand what has changed.

Isolate the problem. Make sure you have more than one CD to test with, test at different times and be patient. Even if nothing changed, your mood alone could impact things so you want to make sure the change is consistent at a number of times and moods and with a number of CDs you know well. Then if you are still sure there is an issue or the issues is intermittent, I would follow the lead of several other posters and look into electricity control. If you can afford it, get a PS power plant (probably the p-300, $1245 http://psaudio.com/products/p300_overview.asp). If you can get one from a friend or local dealer or I think PS has a 30 day trial period, either way, TRY before you BUY. A lot of money, probably your most expensive piece, but since it will help all 3 NAD units then it is only like $400 a piece. Who knows you might be able to find one used and save a few bucks, just make sure you are getting the most recent model. (But this way you can’t audition it first.)

cd
Thanks for all of the comments and suggestions guys.

What I'm planning to do now is to stick with the current setup I have and change variables one by one. You guys are certainly right, there is definitely a lot of power interference in the dorm. But I don't think I'm able to purchase a PSAudio unit...that is almost as expensive as all of my components put together!!! I'll wait till I move into my apartment and see how the quality of the mains is there, since I'll be graduating in just 2 months.

So, in my current setup, I have each component on a different level, isolation under CD by Vibrapods (btw, if you use more vibrapods than you're supposed to, e.g. 20 pound support for 10 pounds, is that bad?).

I agree on the bad interconnects...I'm planning to go with van den Hul D102 III Hybrid interconnects for the CD, use my IXOS on my tuner, and also upgrade to QED Silver Anniversary Biwire for my speakers. Any comments on this?

Thanks, all.
Lenny, the Vibrapods work by having a specific amount of "give" factored into them. By "over-podding" and not following the recommended weight ranges, you can get into a situation where the pods are not compressing and the component is simply resting on top of them. At that point, you start to get more direct energy transfer from the supporting shelf up through the pods and into the component. Whether or not the increased coupling or lack of damping is beneficial would be up to the ears of the "beerholder" and the individual component being supported : ) Sean
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Thanks for that...I thought that theory might hold.

So I removed the extra Vibrapods...sounds a little more "realistic".