On/Off Switch


People spend a lot of effort to feed their audio system with clean power. Dedicated power lines, new wires from the electrical panel, special hospital grade or audio grade power outlets, expensive devices to do additional power filtering are just some of the things that are quite often done in this hobby. Then we buy expensive power cords, special audiophile fuses, and even replace the factory IEC inlets with better quality.
This is all good, and I understand that once you have a system with high enough resolution, the changes are audible. But how often do we open the cover of our equipment to discover that although we spend so much money on a special power cord, the wire (incidentally much thinner and cheaper than our special power cord) from the IEC goes all the way from the back to the front just to go through a cheap on/off switch and back to the rear or the middle of the chassis.
I just looked at partsconnexion, hificollective, vhaudio, and a few other web sites that specialize in audiophile grade parts and could not find a nice solid audio grade on/off switch. Why is that? If a fuse makes a difference in the sound, and (according to some manufacturers) even the direction of the fuse has audible differences (something I can never hear btw), it would make sense that the contact parts of the on/off switch would be important too.
So my real question is does the quality of the on/off switch matter and what is a good on/off switch to use in a power amplifier?
nenon
LED indicator lights have also been found to slightly pollute the sound as well.
Indeed, but often the traditional incandescent lights on older gear are measurably worse. When my old Quad 303 power amp was refurbished a few years ago the service engineer showed me  on the scope the improvement made by using a led compared to the old incandescent bulb.
OP
If I were building an amp the power switch would be a concern. If I’m not building one, but buying one, altering it would be of no value to me. I mean, why? Why fix something that is not broken?

Manufactures decide on what kind, type, and level of power sw they will use in what ever amp they make.

I have not heard too many arguments on $10K or more priced amps power swituches being crap and needing replacement immediately or for that matter, at all..

I’ve owned mono tube amps that ran $7500 a pr. Which used a $1 toggle switch. They sounded fabulous.

The amps, not the switches. The switches just sounded like ‘click’. Louder if you really put a little something behind it when you flipped them on or off.

I made one alteration to those amps. Opened them up to allow the leads connected to the biasing pot to be extended outside the amp to by pass the on board meter so a better easier to see volt meter could be used when biasing or checking bias.

Furthermore, the ON/OFF sw of and by itself, makes no argument for or aginst power cords or for that matter any other connective cabling. To think so, is ludicrous.

The sonics of an amplifier do not hinge on the value of its power switch. There is far more to the amp than that.

Go read up on Shindo amps. $20K and up lower powered tube amps and see what kind of power sw is used. I’m certain it will open your eyes.

As well, not every ON/OFF sw is seeing full current or remains in the ckt at all times. Some do. Some do not. Relays are used to dispense power about the amp and are a part of many amps ‘soft start’ opwerational system.

I tend to think about the audio-nervosa minutia this way… of all the things one might do to improve the sound of an amp, is completely reworking the power switch the obvious path to follow given the amps already quite possible outstanding sonic results?

If one is thinking of how to improve the sound of an amp, maybe it is time to find another amp, well, if it is an SS amp.

Messing around there has never even crossed my mind, until a knife sw on a former preamp I bought here was broken off during shipping. What did I do? Sent it back to the maker to have the exact same switch put in place of the broken one. Problem solved. Results? Excellent. No further worries.

I’d worry about more tangible and meaningful areas to improve the presentation… not swapping out switches. But that’s just me.

Enjoy.


I've never tried a higher quality on/off switch, but I just know it can't possibly make a difference in the sound. Just like fuses. Trust me, I read a book about how electricity works, and understood some of it 😉
The same argument can be made for internal wiring.  People spend thousands on expensive speaker cables only to find out that their speakers are internally wired with lamp cord.