Audiophile Grade Wall Receptacle


Moving homes.  Any recommendation for quality wall receptacle?   Pangea?  Audioquest?

 

Thanks

 

mlapenta

How many are you replacing? If you are talking about the whole house, almost any good 20 amp Pass/Seymour, Hubbell, etc. with a nylon body will be a large improvement over those bags full of duplex outlets for ten-twenty bucks used by most builders. The difference? Friends, I know who bought homes new here, after 12-18 months the receptacles would start to sag when you plug into them. My parent's home, an old English Tudor, clay tile roof, copper gutters, still have these ancient looking brown Hubbell outlets in the basement from the ’50s, early 60s, and to my amazement, there is tight as anything made today.

@boxcarman and @retiredfarmer

Sorry - sarcasm was intended.  I use higher end receptacles just because. Can I hear a difference, probably not. Some of this stuff I just use in case I might be missing out on something, but I certainly do not sit around doing A/B comparisons or obsessing over the result. My general order of the factors I believe make the most noticeable improvement/difference in the sonic quality of a home audio system goes like this: speakers, electronics, room, supports/isolation/damping, cables, and finally other doo-dads and add-ons. The receptacles fall somewhere between cables and doo-dads - IMO.

@kellyp

Tellurium alloys are junk. Get a conduction chart for copper alloys and you will be shocked.

Huh? - Tellurium copper is by far the most conductive of the copper alloys at 93% of IACS. Here is a chart.

Post removed 

"Hubbell catalog #5352A 20A 125V receptacle. Pure copper."

Not true, brass contacts a metal to avoid.