I have some very powerful amps, (Michi 8) and I run them from my AudioQuest Niagara 7000 on a dedicated line. They actually sound better than straight into the wall outlet.
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When using a power conditioner, why is it advised to run amps directly to the wall?
I have seen it recommended that power for amplifiers should be run directly from the wall outlet vs through the power conditioner. Why?
I have a 5.1 HT setup with all McIntosh electronics including three monoblocks and one stereo amp. I have everything running power from the MOC1500 Power Control Center.
Look forward to learning.
A quote from Vinnie Rossi audio site see below: Mike ’’With active power factor correction (PFC) and superior regulation and stability, the power supply ensures maximum performance regardless of AC mains quality. Housed in a fully enclosed compartment precision machined into Brama’s solid aluminum body, it is fully grounded and isolated from the audio circuitry, performing like a highly-responsive, well-tuned engine.’’ See Vinnie Rossi here. |
It may help audiophiles understand that while line level devices (DAC, preamps, etc.) are usually fully regulated, linear amplifiers almost never are. That is, your preamp has little regulators which, combined with the power supply keep the working DC voltages very stable within a wide tolerance of incoming voltages. Common IC regulators are 5V, 12V and 15V for instance. They are good, small, cheap and relatively low current. Think 1A or less. Definitely too small and heat producing to include in most amps. Linear amplifiers however, with linear supplies are almost never regulated at all. Rare exceptions are the Krell FPB and Sanders Magtech. As a result of not being regulated the DC rails move in proportion to the wall voltage. Not something that happens with your DAC at all. Your DAC probably gets solid DC rails at anything over 100 VAC out of the wall. As a result, having a high current voltage regulator not only keeps your equipment safe and functioning it also ensures your amplifier can perform consistently in much worse power situations than it would otherwise. I wrote more about this here. |