120V is the standard voltage. 125 is not even really high. That would be pretty common if you are the near end of a line run. Transformer hum is not from high voltage, it is from DC offset and sometimes from wickedly bad THD on the line. Likely there was an issue with the mains transformer and/or balancing on your line between phases causing a DC offset. Consumer electronics company (and motor, etc.) will do extensive reliability testing with low voltage, high voltage, etc. as field failures are very costly and easily prevented. A large DC offset if a much different beast. With transformers and motors there is nothing you can really do.
Using battery power to go off the City's power grid
I'm using a Bluetti AC200MAX 2,200 watt expandable power station to take my system off the city's power grid. It runs off a lithium ion phosphate battery with a 4,800 watt pure sine wave inverter. My total system only takes about 450 watts so I have never heard the fan kick on - it is totally silent. The music comes from a completely black background, with a huge soundstage that sounds very natural. I know that Ric Schultz has talked about these types of setups and there is a very expensive Stromtank battery system that is marketed to audiophiles. Anyone else tried this type of setup in their audio system?
Here is a link to a review:
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@theaudioamp I had forgotten about dc offset issue which I did know about at the time, this was many years ago when I had the issue. |
You should realize that the power coming into your house qualifies as "perfect sine wave" yet it has (at my house) 4-5% THD. I am familiar with PS Audio power regenerators. They analyze the power in with a scope and give you a THD reading for the incoming power. It would be extremely helpful if someone could power a PSA regenerator from some of the highly touted battery systems with "perfect sine wave" inverters and publish the actual THD numbers. Until then I'll remain skeptical. Anyone who calls their power "perfect" is pretty much by definition lying. But modern marketing practices allow it. Jerry |
@sns Power out of my PSAudio regenerator is always 119.9 vac. voltage in is generally pretty good but this summer with high air conditioner use in SoCal it is often 115vac. I've also seen 122V. I too have a monitor plugged into an outlet on the counter. Tube amps love the same voltage every day, so I'm glad I got the PP10. Jerry |
@ I used one of early PSAudio regenerators many years ago, ended up much preferring my transformer based PC. Mine was one of the lower power PS, used only on front end components. Perhaps the newer PSAudio devices much better than previous generations.
I have yet to find satisfactory PC for amps and I've tried many. If battery power doesn't blunt transients could be well worth it. I don't recall blunting of transients with my N.E.W., so assume can be done. |
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