New Transformer on the Pole


So, I got home yesterday and my wife told me that the power was out for a few hours while the town electrical department replaced the transformer on the pole across the street. I looked outside the window and saw the new transformer--much different (nicer, more modern) looking that the old one that I've been looking at for years. You know what I'm wondering......

So, last night I got a chance to fire up the rig and do some listening and I have to tell you that I heard some noticeable improvement in the sound. The background was "blacker" and there was a bit more purity and dimensionality. Am I just imagining this or could a "transformer upgrade" really deliver sonic gains?

dodgealum
Hi Hal,

The sensitivity of an audio component to line voltage variations will of course vary greatly among different designs.

I would expect, for example, that a well designed line-level component having a well regulated power supply will generally have little or no such sensitivity. Although even in that case it seems conceivable to me that sonic differences might sometimes occur, for example as a consequence of small changes in internal operating temperatures that would result from changes in line voltage, which would affect the power dissipated by linear regulators and hence their temperatures.

At the other end of the spectrum, though, a tube power amplifier having an unregulated power supply, in which both the filament voltages applied to the tubes and the high voltages applied to the tubes and other circuitry vary essentially in proportion to the line voltage, will have a great deal of sensitivity. In fact Atmasphere has mentioned in some past threads that he has measured a two volt difference in line voltage making as much as a 40% difference in the power capability of a tube amp. And with that difference in power capability a considerable difference in distortion performance seems to me to also be a likely result.

So as is usual in audio, it all depends :-)

Best regards,
-- Al
 
almarg / cleeds - 

Thanks! Your responses make sense (to me anyway, can't speak for the community at large). And further to your point almarg, I have a solid state amp, Musical Fidelity M6si and would have to believe a tube amp would be more discriminating where slight voltage variations occur. 
Utilities change service pole top transformers for various reasons.
1.  The transformer is overloaded and a higher capacity VA transformer is needed.
2. The old transformer contained fluids that are no longer allowed in the utility industry and had to be replaced by a new transformer that in addition to having better internal oils, it has better specifications.
3.  The line loading off that transformer was sagging and a new/better transformer is needed.
4.  The voltage on the distribution line and loading may have exceeded the original ratings and required upgrades to the circuit.

Either way, a new transformer with higher (always better than the old transformer) VA rating will be much less noisy and perform better and also help prevent voltage/current sagging with higher loads.

Also, being one of the first homes off of a distribution pole top transformer is always a good thing.  Being the last on the last isn't very good.

enjoy