What to tell my electrician


I am building out a dedicated listening room in a house we just purchased. There is a dedicated 200 amp breaker box for a hot tub we are getting rid of. So, I will have this breaker box deducted for a listening room. Assume i have a rig with mono blocks (ss), multichannel amp (ss) ,pre/pro, universal disc, dac, large led tv, cable box, distributed audio/video controller (control 4). The room is in the basement not very far from the breaker box (running lines would not be a problem). Also, the walls will be opened for the renovation so adding outlets and running wire not an issue.

I have read many of the threads on the subject here and am often confused by conflicting info and partial advice

So, what I would like is for any friends out here to put yourself in my shoes and imagine you are telling the electrician (who from what I have read will typically be amused and a bit confused by the Audiophile focus and perhaps not the best source of advice) what to do. So, would be great if the post is you imagining you are speaking to the electrician and saying. "ok, here is what I want you to do ......"

Assume I want to do it right and legally (so no non code separate grounds).
dangelod
I'd need a stethoscope to hear this tranny. The Panamax is way heavy and silent.
The fan in the bathroom makes more noise at my seating position.....or even the 'fridge in the kitchen.
Know what you mean, though. Late at night, especially, stuff you can't hear during the day becomes quite annoying. But not that iso trans!
If you are going to put in multiple circuits, make sure that all those connected with interconnects are on the same side of the phase. Balance the load by put everything else on the other side of the phase. You may want to provide him with special wall outlets.
200 amp panel board for a hot tub? WOW! Usually this size panel board can run an entire house.

1. Make sure the 200a PB is fed properly. Minimum #3/0 feeders and neutral. And, most importantly, a MINIMUM of #4 ground back to source where this sub panel is fed.
If, in fact this is a sub panel... I'm guessing it is, the ground and neutral must be isolated from each other. And tell your electrician to check your main bonding and main ground at your source... make sure they are properly installed and have little resistance to ground. If the electrician seems confused... get a different electrician.

2. Most likely, the install will be with #12 romex. If the panel is more than 100' away use #10 for voltage drop. The boxes in residential are usually plastic or fiberglass attached to wood studs. If you are dealing with wood studs and non-metallic boxes... you have no need for isolated grounding.

3. If you are using fluorescent bulbs in your home, do not feed them from this panel! If possible, throw them all in the trash.

4. Isolation transformers are an extreme measure, especially since you already have some isolation with a sub panel. Transformers buzz and vibrate... eventually.

5. You can attach a surge suppressor to the panel.

6. Good quality hospital grade receptacles are adequate. Your electrician can get these for you.

7. Multiple paths to ground are BAD! Make sure the electrician understands this theory. Get the project inspected by the local authorities... talk to the inspector while onsite. Ask the inspector to check grounding. Grounding is the most important item in electrical... along with everything thing else...;)

I am a licenced electrician with 27 years experience, 5 years apprentiship.
I have been Supervision for the last 20... I have overseen Major projects such as Hospitals, Waste Treatment, Manufacturing and now Coal Burning Power House Installations. But, I started in residential.

Most importatantly... a practicing audiophile.

Best of luck with your project,
Greg
Excellent ideas, all of the above.

One addition is to ensure your circuits which feed any computer equipment are also served by armored cable (BX). The noise emitted by NM (Romex) with computers attached is terrible.

The idea of using #10 BX is a good one, but limit the circuit breaker to the rating of the receptacle (20A).

Isolation transformers serve best when connected phase-to-phase on the primary side (240V) avoiding the polluted neutral connection filled with harmonics. The secondary should be center tapped, for your equipment.

This creates a separately derived system; one which must be grounded as well. However, this ground, while connected to all available grounding electrodes (typically cold water on the street side of the main water shutoff, within two feet of the entry of the water pipe to the house) and a supplemental grounding electrode (ground rod), will be an independent connection for the derived neutral on the isolated system. This method means least electrical noise intrusion into the isolated system. BUT, it also means providing a distribution system with overcurrent protection for the derived circuits. In other words, use the transformers to feed a circuit breaker subpanel.

If your electrician doesn't immediately understand exactly what I've written above, run away fast and find a new one.

Best of luck,

Stuart Polansky
Maryland State ME #7461