Stupid Power Conditioner question but...


Hello All,

Silly question but I recently had a 20 amp dedicated circuit installed for my HT. I have a SimAudio Moon Titan HT200 5 channel amp (that's why I wanted the 20 amp circuit installed). I run all my gear through a Panamax M5300 PC. This is a 15 amp unit. Would this be limiting the current draw making my move to the 20 amp circuit moot? Do I need to move to a 20 amp PC to realize the full potential?

Thank you all in advance for any/all replies...
kingbr
I think the OP did say he/she had a whole house surge protector in place.
already. If so, I think any downstream surge protection would be superfluous.

IMHO, putting an amp behind a surge protector that is not a whole house one is a potential way to diminish sound quality. And, especially so if you have a high output amplifier. So, considering my monoblocks put out more than 100wpc, is there any power conditioner/surge suppressor that will allow them to perform without limiting their performance?
B
“So, considering my monoblocks put out more than 100wpc, is there any power conditioner/surge suppressor that will allow them to perform without limiting their performance?”

Check out Audience, they are non-current limiting and provide excellent power conditioning.

https://audience-av.com/conditioners/
Do you really have a 20-amp dedicated circuit? There are three things that rate the circuit at 20 amps: a 20-amp circuit breaker, a wire that handles 20-amps (#12 or #10) and a 20-amp receptacle.

A 20-amp receptacle (Nema 5-20) can accept both a 20-amp and 15-amp plug. A 15-amp receptacle (nema 5-15) can only accept a 15-amp plug. The 5-15 is the most common receptacles installed in houses. This limits your circuit to 15-amps and is the reason why the Panamax unit is rated at 15 amps (because it has a 15-amp power cord that only fits in 15-amp receptacles).

The difference in the receptacles is a 5-15 has the hot and neutral parallel to each other because the plug blades are parallel. The 5-20 has a "cross" in the neutral because the 20 amp plug has the hot and neutral perpendicular and the "cross’’ enables both the 15 and 20 amp plugs to be used.

If you buy a 20-amp power strip it will have a 20-amp cord and will not fit in a conventional 15-amp receptacle. You will have to replace it with a 5-20 receptacle and the electrician won't do it if the other two conditions are not met.