Synergistic Grounding Block and Tweaking it.



Synergistic Grounding Block and Tweaking it.

I always liked the Synergistic Products and I have to give them credit for bringing out some of the most unique tweaks available today. There interconnects, speaker cables, and power cables were always top notch, perhaps a little pricey, but I always hated all of those extra mini couplers wires! So, I moved away from their wires. I think there new series does away with the extra mini couplers, but they are still IMHO still quite pricey.

I wanted to try the Synergistic Grounding Block. The price was not too expensive, so I ordered one from my dealer. Did I mention I always hated all those darn extra SR wires? This grounding block better impress.

Once I received it, I couldn’t believe the size of it. It is about 6 “long and maybe 1 ½” thick and about 2” inches high. At one end it has a hole for accepting a regular size banana plug and on the top there are 18 pin hole openings. The grounding block comes included with six (6) of the skinniest wires with the smallest banana plugs I have ever seen for grounding! There is also included another skinny wire that is connected to an AC plug (ground only) that plugs into the wall outlet with the other end having a standard size banana that connects to the side of the grounding block.

Well, since I only own one other SR product, I changed five (5) of the rest of the banana plug ends to RCA so I was able to try it with my own non SR equipment.

To my surprise, it did indeed make the soundstage purer and deeper. I don’t understand it? All of my equipment is plugged into dedicated grounded outlets, so why would this little diminutive grounding block with all those skinny wires do more?

Now, the tweaker in me took over. It seems SR also sells higher grade connection ground cables, but boy, are they pricey! Two of them cost more than the block itself! And the Synergistic grounding block can accept 18 of these ground connections!

I had some pure .9999 22 gauge silver wire left over from another project so I installed an RCA connector, sleeved it through some Teflon tubing and pushed one end into one of those 18 pin holes in the grounding block. To keep the wire from falling out of the pin holes, I pushed cut 2” lengths of some .999 18 gauge silver wire also into the pin hole which tightened up the connection. On the end, the RCA was connected to an unused RCA on my equipment. I also had some pure .999 16 gauge silver wire, so I installed this on one end with a regular banana, and then installed an AC plug (ground only) to the other end. This replaced the skinny wire that SR supplied to connect from the wall to the grounding block.

Sounding better… interesting!

On line I found some 12 gauge .9999 silver wire about 6 foot long, that cost about $50. But with this cable, to keep it pure throughout I used no connector on either end. I did this by shaping the wall outlet wire end into a V and pushed it into the wall outlet for a tight fit. The other end was crimped tight and shoved into the regular banana hole into the grounding block.

Each “upgrade” in wire went through a minor break in period. (hours not days) and doggone it, it did increase the purity of the sound.

So, now with the 18 available pin holes in the grounding block, I have all of my system connected. That includes my video and subwoofers!

Someday, I would like to try one of the higher grade SR cables to compare to my DIY version.

Folks, this little grounding block does work wonders and far exceeds the price to performance, but it is still a mystery to me. Plus all those darn wires!

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128x128ozzy
68pete:
The wonderful fact about the Grounding Block is that they are sold with a 30 day return policy and since they are not heavy shipping costs are minimal.

So I suggest order one and try different combinations of connections. For "best results" Synergistic Research suggests the Grounding Block be connected directly to a wall outlet and not to a power conditioner. There can be "whatever" also on that circuit.

You do not have to have every component attached to the Grounding Block to get great results. I would suggest first trying the preamp or integrated amp attached first. Give you system about 24 hours to adjust. Then add your source and see if additional grounding is helpful. Also the yype connecting wire will make a difference in sound. The two SR type connector wire have a different effect.

This is a definite try "different combinations" and pick the combination that sounds best to you. I found the process to be quite interesting to undertake, and the final sonic improvement to be quite impressive.

I think the Synergistic Research Grounding Block, audio grade fuses such as the SR Black fuse, and an Audio Grade A/C wall outlet are the basic foundation points onto which one builds an outstanding sounding system.

David Pritchard

68pete,

No I do not have the grounding block ground connected to a outlet that the MC-.05' are plugged into. (I might plug one into that outlet at a later time, so thanks for that suggestion.)

I do think the more of your Audio / Video system connected to the SR ground block is a plus, so just about everything I have is connected to the SR Block. That's why my DIY ground cables is cheaper.

But, the Vendor is wrong about having to plug the grounding block into a  Audio system outlet. A simple mind would think that to be true. However, I find I am getting better sound quality with using the ground from an outlet outside of my audio dedicated outlets. Don't know why but it just is.

So, I guess don't hesitate to experiment and don't limit yourself to Vendors opinions.

Ozzie and David thank you for the info. I will be looking into it soon
Thanks Pete

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68pete,

I’m not sure if you are still following this thread. But Glory’s recent post to it (and then it was suddenly removed) got me to review it again.

I just installed a MC .05 as you suggested into the same outlet as the AC end is plugged into and it does seem to clean thing up even further.

Thanks for that tip.

ozzy