Power Conditioner


Hi everyone, 
I need help here with any suggestion, wich of these 2 Power Conditioner is the best and why? 
-Furman Elite 20PFI
-Furman Elite 15DMI
Do i need both? 
Thank you. 
128x128martin_leger

Be warned, power conditioners tend to rob some of the dynamics & limit current in amps.
The ones that don't, usually have massively large transformers & cost much more than the Furman.
Unless it has a lot of capacitance, which these do. Simply putting a great big cap on your AC will improve dynamics and bass like you won't believe. The problem is it needs to be carefully designed, or else filling all that will draw so much current it blows breakers - which already happened to kijanki see his comments above. 
How big of a capacitor across the AC line Millercarbon?  Since you say careful design can you tell us what that value is?
Trying to figure out if you know absolutely nothing about capacitors, or know a little but just aren't thinking, or are another one of these guys trying to take a jab at me. Read my post, read kijanki, think about it.
Well I don’t think I am pretty certain you have no idea what size the capacitor needs to be. That capacitor in the Furman is fairly useless other than for higher frequency EMI which it will help. It’s voltage tracks AC voltage and is only above the reflected voltage of the power supply capacitors for a short period of time.

That capacitor is going to be at most about 200uF. That’s a physically large cap. Probably its more like 100uf. Peak AC voltage on 120V is 168. Let’s say we have a DC rail on a linear supply of 40v. At best, that 200uF is like 168^2 / 40^2 = 3500uF added to the amp DC rail. Most good amps have far more than that. Because the current transfer is only for short period where reflected AC on the cap is above DC the effective adder in uF is effectively maybe 1/2 that and practically much less.

But hey, why don’t you tell us how it works.

Now if your amp has a switching power supply, then yes this will help, not in power delivery but reduced EMI especially if that power supply already has active power factor correction.