@audphile1 I visited the Puritan table yesterday at AXPONA and asked them about plugging in a higher power/current amp versus the wall. They claim their 156 will not limit the amplifier any whatsoever! I'm doing this now with my Accuphase A-80 with zero problems. I've also used my Coda #8 amp plugged into my 156 with no problems. I've had my 156 for a few years now and was actually interested in maybe buying a 1512 since I ran out of outlets. They actually recommended I just buy another PSM-156 and use both instead. They told me to use one for digital and the other for everything else. This suggesting will definitely save me money and that's what I plan on doing!
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@willywonka I don’t doubt your experience and I definitely don’t doubt them stating the 156 isn’t current limiting and that you should buy one more. My experience with it, and I bought the PSM156 new from the dealer, that it mellowed the dynamics. Components I had plugged into it were Pass XA30.8 amp, Pass XP-22 preamp, Bricasti M3 DAC. When I upgraded from XA30.8 to X260.8 monos and decided to try these amps in a puritan 156, the unit started ringing and buzzing like crazy. I actually thought it was going to fall apart. It could not handle the 260w/ch mono amps, even at turn on. I didn’t like it’s impact in my system even though initially it appeared it reduced noise…it just rounded things off and reduced dynamics. I sold it and never looked back. If it works for you with your gear, great! Power conditioners are something that you need to really try to see if you like the effect. In addition, the outlets on the 156 over time lose grip and the power cords end up sagging off. You need to prop them with some sort of support. Here’s a picture of 156. I just can’t see how it possibly would not limit current. |
@grk cool. See the picture above. Also, any component that has current flowing thru it will emit EMI/RFI. Unless it’s enclosed in a faraday cage. pick up this tool and measure EMI near your components. https://a.co/d/05qmWo1d
good question. 156 removes the DC offset by means of filtering out the DC component and blocking it from reaching the outlets on the 156. That’s done with capacitors and active circuitry. Hence, once again, the components you see in the picture, including caps and coils. Your class D amps don’t draw much from the wall. Probably about the same as a a streamer or a cd player or a dac. No issues for your system. |
@audphile1 I've read MANY reviews and user experiences of the 156 and you seem to be the unicorn here. Maybe yours was defective or maybe your configuration was unique and caused problems! I've used 2 high quality and high current amps plugged directly in to the PSM-156 and noticed ZERO noise issues or current restrictions. I tend to trust the manufacturer over a random single person on the internet. Also if Puritan cared more about making money they would have just suggested to me to buy a 1512 that was well over $4000 instead of just buying another 156. |
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