Grounding ?


Guys,

I currently have a cheater plug on my amplifier which made a substantial difference in clarity and focus. I read somewhere that the amp should be grounded and to use a cheater plug on another unit. Which component should I use the cheater plug on, Pre, CD player or DA?

Thanks,
Wig
128x128wig
Is a possible fix, and this is JUST a question, that 1 or more pieces has an internal hot/neutral swap?
Could you tell somehow? Maybe have all gear plugged into the wall without any I/Cs. Than measure for voltage between the chassis or ground of each piece? If there is a voltage between chassis of 2 pieces, isn't that a hot/ neutral swap?

Does everyone own an outlet tester? The type w/3 leds to indicate various good / bad conditions?
Which raises another question, why do some amp manufacturers include a ground lift switch. The answer is very simple because they know it can be very convenient to flip a switch to lift the ground to avoid hum caused by a ground loop rather than buy and use a sound degrading cheater plug or cutting the ground pin off the power cord.

Note: When using some tube preamps, I have had to lift all the grounds on all components except for the preamp to eliminate hum or considerably reduce it. The other thing to check is to make sure all power cords are not too close to the interconnects.

Mike Elliot talks extensively about ground loops and hum on his Alta Vista website and recommends all except one component be grounded and if a ground fault occurs in any system component it can be safely drawn away by the interconnects via the one grounded component. I think we can trust this excellent designer who has been producing quality gear for many years.

Which raises another question, why do some amp manufacturers include a ground lift switch.
08-09-09: Phd
The switch only lifts the signal ground from the chassis. Never the safety equipment ground from the chassis/enclosure.
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