Are two dedicated lines better than one?


Sorry if this has been discussed before,but next week my electrician is coming to put in a dedicated line.I need to connect my Lamm LL2 preamp,ARC Classic 60 amp,Meridian 588 CD Plyayer,SME Model 10 Turntable and ARC PH1SE. I was going to install one line with 4 outlets but I have 5 components.I do have a Chang conditioner that I can use but would it be better to have a second line put in while the electrician is here? Do 2 lines introduce more noise than a single line? Is it better to seperate components to different lines? I would really appreciate any advice!
aredelico
I have also done the same as several of the other responders. Two lines; one for the front-end, and one for the amp. The cost is minimal, but the impact was worth it! I would not go back to one circuit again. I also recommend 15 amp for the front-end, and 20 amp breaker for the amp.
Go for it!
I have four 20 amp dedicated lines to four dedicated outlets and use every outlet. Ideally it would be nice to have a dedicated line for each piece of gear. Like others above, I agree it's important to keep digital gear separate from other components.

The single most important benefit of dedicated lines is that they prevent "noise, garbage, and grunge" from any other household appliance from interfering w/ your stereo components, and the affect of this is to greatly lower noise floor. So in effect the ded. line really does clean up the AC your stereo components are receiving. Cheers. Craig
I also use 4 dedicated lines (2 for amps, 1 for digital, and one for preamp and electronic x-over) and was able to do away with the power conditioner; but you will have to experiment with your particular situation.

Richard
I spoke to my electrician today and he mentioned something about using a "redundent ground" to isolate the digital noise. Has anyone heard of that?