I have had the ADD Powr Wizard in my system for a couple of weeks and I'm impressed


The audio writer's conundrum: How do you find the right words to describe sound? It's not easy. It's like trying to describe a color. You will get a sense of it but in order to really get it you have to hear it. We have all read many audio writer's attempts to do so with varying degrees of success. What does the writer wish to convey about how a particular component sounds? And more problematically, how does that get put into words?   Here is the bottom line for me- how strong is the emotional impact of the sound when I listen to the equipment? That is it. And of course that can not be separated from the companion question- How strong is the emotional impact of the music? One reason that this hobby is so amazing is that these questions are two sides of the same coin and complement each other beautifully. Collecting fine (and well recorded) music is a great hobby in and of itself. Couple it, however, with the equally enjoyable hobby of component swapping and tweeking and you have a match made in heaven. It's like what happened when John met Paul.
All of which brings me to this review of the ADD Powr Wizard. What I keep returning to over and over again with this thing plugged into a nearby outlet is how intense my emotional connection to the sound and the music is. To use a well worn audio writer cliche, It's like I'm listening to my collection for the first time and hearing things I never heard before. But it is so much more than that. It's not just that I am hearing more of what is on the record it is that I am hearing more of what the artists on the record are intending to create with their music. The ADD Wizard allows me to do this more completely than any other addition to my system over the last 10 years. It lets me fully relax into the music. With all my other tweeks, at least the good ones, the ones that work, I was able to get a better sense of space and detail each time I added one. The benefit of the Wizard is on a different plane than that. Yes it adds to the sense of space and detail in the sound, but it also creates a stronger impression about the music itself. It's a feeling of being one with the music. Hard to describe but very powerful!
You will have to read the literature to get a sense of what ADD Powr is doing with its algorithms and how they are being applied to the household electric circuit in order to filter out the audio nasties so that the music can come shining through in all its glory . That part of the review is way above my pay grade.  I would love to be able to understand that. But hey that's what makes tweeks so much fun. The fact that you may not understand the electronic or physics of it doesn't mean that you are not hearing amazing things from it. And in the case of the ADD Powr Wizard what I am hearing just makes me smile.
bradmorris1
So where is the test data to support the claims of ADD-POWER?
So far is seems all subjective commentary.
Look forward to AMIR -Audio Science Review, getting his hands and analyzer  on one of these .
I guarantee he will find zero benefits from having this unit in the power supply .
Through my sources, I believe that there is preliminary test data that shows FFT spectral acoustic measurements, FFT noise floor measurements, and frequency response and THD measurements with a Harmon Kardon amplifier. Testing was done by a Harmon tech.
The results are interesting and curious enough to warrant further tests.

It sure would be of interest and worthy of scrutiny by other professionals.
Surely it is possible that he may find zero benefits, based upon his knowledge and experience, but he cannot refute acoustic spl measurements,  And if those dBs reveal more acoustic energy simply from a device plugged into AC power, then that is a benefit to the amplifier's power supply.
I had a longtime audiophile buddy over for a listen...we listened for 20 minutes, then I unplugged it...listened for 5-10 minutes and then I
plugged it back in...and listened - he said, leave it in!  - much better,
I am convinced...more air, more wight, bigger soundstage, more
relaxed presentation - i.e. more musical...
I've had several of the ElectraClears in and around my system and also have a Symphony Pro. They have have been my favorite tweak in regards to power conditioning and noticed they get better after a few days of being plugged in. I just recently picked up a Wizard and have it plugged into the wall on the same receptacle where all my components are. Definitely improved the overall clarity and detail while keeping everything natural and easy. Very happy thus far with the engagement factor too.

Have any of the Wizard or Sorcer owners noticed things improve the longer the unit is plugged in, kinda like what I've experienced with the ElectraClears?