Best kept secret in AC line filtering conditioning


How many of you guys truly know of Puritan Audio Labs ? Not many yet ,these are made in the U.K 
I have 3 friends in Europe that own them , and found a guy at our audio club just  an hour away 
I will check out next week , and against the much more costly AQ niagra  this removes hum,noise 
like nobodies business .model 136, and  better still model 156 all under $2k check out the video.
https://6moons.com/audioreview_articles/puritan/


128x128audioman58
My electrician put in the rod and wiring. No inspector. When I sell I remove the wire! 
Millercarbon wrote,

Readers find that with Millercarbon.

Good old Jimmy. Jimmy refers to himself in the third person. Jimmy’s got good game. Jimmy’s got special shoes, amps, and speakers. https://youtu.be/xoskJPDbXR0?t=33
chris_w_uk
... maybe 230V as opposed to 110V has something to do with it? I don’t know, apart from 230V equipment drawing roughly 50% the current of 110V.
You're confused. For any given load, the current will be the same as 120VAC as it is at 240VAC. See Laws of Thermodynamics, conservation of energy.
@cleeds
1000Watts @ 240V - 1000/240 = 4.16 Amps
1000Watts @ 110V - 1000/110 = 9.09 Amps
My point being if connections are not perfect trying to pass 9.09 Amps through them will cause more problems than passing 4.16 Amps.
chris_w_uk
You’re confused, and now you’re comparing apples with oranges.
1000Watts @ 240V - 1000/240 = 4.16 Amps
1000Watts @ 110V - 1000/110 = 9.09 AmpsMy point being if connections are not perfect trying to pass 9.09 Amps through them will cause more problems than passing 4.16 Amps.
@chris_w_uk. Sorry, but you just don’t know what you’re talking about. The component will draw the same current at 120VAC as it does at 240VAC. If the component draws 1,000 watts at 120VAC, it will draw half that wattage at 240VAC. You’re confusing voltage with current.