Best upgrade ever: cryo outlet for my refrigerator


This is the weirdest thing that has happened to me in all these years in audio:

I won a Dutch auction for a 20 amp silver plated, cryoed ACME receptacle. I decided to burn it in by running my refrigerator through it--fine. So I went on and replaced the old outlet, thoroughly cleaned the leads and ground wire and applied some Pro Gold.

When I listened to my stereo I could not believe the improvement in the sound! It was so powerful, three dimensional and w/ such a quiet background it was spooky. How could this be? I had cleaned the leads leading to other receptacles in the circuit and my equipment was being fed through a brand new PS Audio Power Port! Without a doubt this has been the most noticeable upgrade in my system--ever. Even when Deano came w/ his spare class A monoblocks did the difference in sound was this huge. The same goes for adding a top notch Clear Image T4 line conditioner I got recently--not even close.

I asked the maintenance guy and he told me what I had cleaned before were the return wires and receptacles in the circuit. It turns out the fridge goes first and my power Port is two receptacles downstream...

The bass was MUCH deeper, the musical presentation way more relaxed and the high frequencies detailed and w/out a hint of harshness. This is freaky.

Can anyone out there explain this?
psychicanimal
You will find that your food taste better also. Especially cryo'd frozen food.
Hey,I don't dissagree with you one bit.-----I'm going over to the neighbors and will be installing some cryoed outlets for them ; then as soon as I can afford it --I'll try some in my house for overkill. ----- Actually, one might think of it as one wire that gets interrupted as it goes in and out of each outlet. I wouldn't have thought of it;but it does make sense.
What you are hearing is part of what you get by using one breaker and dedicated line for each component in the system. This is exactly why I have 14 dedicated breakers.

The cost to have dedicated wiring (assuming you own the place) is reasonable, compared to what many of us have invested in our equipment.