But I understood the amplifiers require internal oscillators to operate? Why do you need to add an external oscillator?An oscillator is something that generates a signal. An amplifier is something which boosts some combination of the voltage, current, and power of a signal. What I was describing was a power regenerator, which takes in AC power from the wall outlet, and sends out "regenerated" AC to the components that are plugged into it. Power is regenerated in the regenerator by amplifying a signal generated by a 60 Hz oscillator which it contains. As I indicated, the regenerator's amplifier and oscillator are powered by DC which its own power supply creates from the AC it receives from the wall outlet.
If all this processing is in the amplifier, why would it matter what you do to the power before it arrives at the amplifier?No design can reject noise and distortion on the AC it receives to an infinite degree. A substantial body of empirical and anecdotal evidence exists suggesting that designs at pretty much all price points can benefit sonically if the AC they receive is relatively clean.
Regards,
-- Al