@molingus My point being, the danger of fire is in or at the component itself not wether or not it causes enough overload at the outlet or anyplace in the circuit to trip the breaker before causing a fire in the wall.
I agree, at any rate, if your component is blowing fuses, something is wrong and it needs to be fixed., not band aided with a bigger fuse or breaker.
I also agree that components are designed and built (with few exceptions) with a power supply thats job is to make that component operate and sound as intended, using the power supplied by any particular country’s energy suppliers without having to add thousands of dollars of fancy outlets, cables and magic fuses.
If I paid $20K for an amp and it didn't sound incredible with the cable/cord and fuses it came with, I'd send the sucker back and get something else.....Jim
I agree, at any rate, if your component is blowing fuses, something is wrong and it needs to be fixed., not band aided with a bigger fuse or breaker.
I also agree that components are designed and built (with few exceptions) with a power supply thats job is to make that component operate and sound as intended, using the power supplied by any particular country’s energy suppliers without having to add thousands of dollars of fancy outlets, cables and magic fuses.
If I paid $20K for an amp and it didn't sound incredible with the cable/cord and fuses it came with, I'd send the sucker back and get something else.....Jim