What is known is NO power cord will solve his dimming light VD problem...
Very true!
Power Cables and Wall Sockets
Without knowing for certain, it seems to me that power cables can only be as good as the in-home wiring coming to the wall socket. Is it possible that those who use expensive cables have improved the wiring to the socket? Or is the power from most wall sockets normally excellent, but is limited by conventional power cables?
The lights dimming is caused by voltage sagging. Voltage sagging is caused by one of two things:
The voltage drop (or loss) is an easy calculation: V = A * R That is, the voltage lost is equal to the current times the resistance on the line. Since A is a function of the amplifier we can’t really reduce that except by new amps or more efficient speakers. 😁 What you can control:
It may very well be worthwhile to you to get a cheap voltage meter you can sit and watch while playing music, like this one, which not only shows you the AC voltage but the Neutral to ground voltage, in other words, tests if you have a bad neutral:
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@jerryg123 Said!
I agree I went to the McIntosh free Clinic and got cured.😁 Mike |
My earlier post referred to the house having, say, a 40A feed from the pole. So I would be checking the voltage on the audio circuit, and on a non audio circuit.
So your list is good IME, just IMO, it is missing the stuff outside of the audio only circuit. Points #1 and #3 sort of imply the parallel circuits that I mentioned… especially #3. But I am not 100% sure? |