I was in this position and I experienced an improvement. I have a pair of 15 amp circuits that have Hubble duplex outlets. All my equipment uses upgraded 15 amp power cords. I installed a Richard Gray power conditioner that came with a very beefy factory cord. After it was up and running I purchased a 15/20 amp Pangea adapter and tried some of my other power cords and noticed a slight improvement. I then tried a Shunyata Venom HC power cable with very noticeable results. The Shunyata cable does not require the adapter. I could tell a greater difference changing that one cable than swapping cables from the conditioner to my component’s. Cheers , Mike B.
A not sarcastic question for the power conditioner/upgraded power cord folks
And I realize that there are those that don’t believe in either
Assuming you use a power conditioner and after market power cords, do you feel that the power cord from the power conditioner to the wall might be a limiting or even a negating factor to the performance of the after market power cords that run from the power conditioner to the gear?
The reason I ask is that I was about to embark upon some more experimentation with different power cords and where I plugged them into when I discovered that the aftermarket cords I had purchased before and some recent arrivals are actually a meter shorter than the ones that came with the gear. This doesn’t matter for the amp due to its location, but when I did my last power cord upgrade I ran my CDP and pre into a conditioner so the length for those didn’t matter either, but as I was doing the musical chairs with power cords thing today, I also was intending to run the CDP and pre straight into the wall on separate dedicated circuits, but I found out that I am a tad short on those two.
Which doesn’t preclude me from moving my dedicated circuit outlets up a couple of feet, and I suppose I probably will, but I was curious as to the opinions about the limitations of a power conditioners power cord.
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Over the years, during the course of my experimentation with power conditioners and power cables, on several occasions, I tried plugging my amps directly into the wall outlets (with and without upgraded aftermarket audiophile wall outlets). Plugging amps directly into the wall outlet was conventional wisdom years ago, and some/many still abide by it. However, as stated, I found that I still preferred plugging my amplifiers into a high quality, non-power limiting power conditioners, such as my Audioquest Niagara 3000. I’m very happy that you’ve found a method which works best for you and your audio system. I’m also very happy to convey what works best for me. Happy listening. |
So much of this depends on your equipment, electrical grid and sonic preferences...my amps only sound their best, to me and my friends, plugged into the wall...but if I had different amps and/or lived 3 blocks away (which has a different power company), I might prefer them plugged into a conditioner... |
@kennymacc I wasn’t doubting your results. I’m happy you’re content with your power distribution components. I’d be interested in trying the AQ 3000 or similar level conditioner at some point to see if it makes a positive impact. May be some day. But for now I’m good with powering my system directly from outlets. |
Some years ago I went through a number of the well known PC brands via lending library of CableCo in order to find one that didn't impact transients, no luck, didn't matter if outlets were marked for amp or not. Audience was the best of the lot but prefer all amps straight into wall via dedicated circuit running 10 AWG. |
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