Bear, the system that i was thinking of would make use of multiple high current isolation transformers all wired in parallel. These would be used for one 120 volt feed into a secondary breaker box. This box would be used strictly for A/V gear and would have a dedicated ground.
To achieve this, you would have a parallel feed coming from the mains of the houses' primary breaker box feeding the isolation transformers. In order to protect the transformers should a winding(s) short out, fuses would be installed on both the hot and neutral legs between the transformers and the mains. The parallel wired transformers would then feed the input of the A/V breaker box.
In effect, every circuit connected to this box would be filtered and isolated from the rest of the house and whatever noise was coming in via the outside lines. Not only would you have dedicated lines, those lines would all be filtered. One could then use smaller isolation transformers at the component feedpoint as needed. My primary thoughts are that one would want to use such an approach for digital gear. While this is not so much to further filter what is going into the digital components ( although it would do that), i was thinking more along the lines of keeping the hash and trash that such gear generates from being pumped back into the line and other components.
The total output of the parallel wired transformers would be rated for a higher level than what the secondary breaker box was rated for. This would insure that the transformers could not be damaged due to pulling on them too hard. If such a situation started to develop, the main breaker on the A/V box would trip long before the transformers could come close to saturation. At the same time, running more isolation transformers than needed would also guarantee a measurable amount of headroom so that core saturation would never take place. This would keep the power cleaner with less distortion than what other current limited filters might introduce.
Does this sound like a plan ? Any thoughts / suggestions ? Keep in mind that i've partially based this on the fact that i already have several "beefy" identical isolation transformers. I have not ruled out going to one "huge" transformer as that would surely be far simpler to install. At this point in time though, i've not run across anything that was reasonably priced although i have been looking. Sean
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To achieve this, you would have a parallel feed coming from the mains of the houses' primary breaker box feeding the isolation transformers. In order to protect the transformers should a winding(s) short out, fuses would be installed on both the hot and neutral legs between the transformers and the mains. The parallel wired transformers would then feed the input of the A/V breaker box.
In effect, every circuit connected to this box would be filtered and isolated from the rest of the house and whatever noise was coming in via the outside lines. Not only would you have dedicated lines, those lines would all be filtered. One could then use smaller isolation transformers at the component feedpoint as needed. My primary thoughts are that one would want to use such an approach for digital gear. While this is not so much to further filter what is going into the digital components ( although it would do that), i was thinking more along the lines of keeping the hash and trash that such gear generates from being pumped back into the line and other components.
The total output of the parallel wired transformers would be rated for a higher level than what the secondary breaker box was rated for. This would insure that the transformers could not be damaged due to pulling on them too hard. If such a situation started to develop, the main breaker on the A/V box would trip long before the transformers could come close to saturation. At the same time, running more isolation transformers than needed would also guarantee a measurable amount of headroom so that core saturation would never take place. This would keep the power cleaner with less distortion than what other current limited filters might introduce.
Does this sound like a plan ? Any thoughts / suggestions ? Keep in mind that i've partially based this on the fact that i already have several "beefy" identical isolation transformers. I have not ruled out going to one "huge" transformer as that would surely be far simpler to install. At this point in time though, i've not run across anything that was reasonably priced although i have been looking. Sean
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