When a power cord could obviously affect SQ


I have been a bit of a non-believer in power cords having magical effects on SQ but I have been discussing with Frank Ng a pair of PP 2A3 amps I am purchasing from TriodeLab.  He is supplying a pair of his preferred cables and he points out that the  2A3s’ cathodes are fed directly from the mains transformer.

The amps (UPS willing) arrive tomorrow - this should be quite an experience - it has been quite a game finding great tubes.

 

 

retiredaudioguy

@retiredaudioguy 

He is supplying a pair of his preferred cables and he points out that the  2A3s’ cathodes are fed directly from the mains transformer.

It's a good sign he comped the cables to you for sure! I wonder if shielding is what he thinks of as important. Could well be. I'm a bit puzzled though about his concern about sensitivity to power quality coming from the mains transformer. That current should be passing though rectification and filtering capacitors to make nice clean, quiet DC for your cathod. If it is not it is a design problem, not something to be fixed with a power cable. Color me puzzled.

@ted_b 

Just recently while running 5Hz - 3500 MHz sweeps using a field strength instrument, I noted substantial differences in radiated EMI from various audio power cables. Some emitted surprisingly strong magnetic fields that radiated well beyond the cable jacket, whereas others had undetectable emissions. This implies some cables are clearly better suited for use in close proximity with sensitive digital components (e.g. DACs and streamers) and interconnects.

From an internal perspective, a power cable is not a one-way street, and the better way to view it is not as the last few feet of power feed, but rather as first few feet of what the component "sees" when propagating away problematic internal noise generated by the component itself. This noise exerts direct influence on audio performance, and cable characteristics determine how efficiently it is removed. When one views it from this perspective, it's not a stretch to understand why power cables can "sound" different.

I've quoted your entire post because it should be mandatory reading!  You have provided direct evidence for the theory that it is EMI coming from your component that could make a difference. 

@bruce19 many directly heated triode designs run AC to the cathode - straight from the transformer.

@retiredaudioguy that’s interesting, are there any that you know of that might have a schematic posted online. I have built 4 tube anmps nowv and I just don’t see how that works. Unless we are possibly miscommunicating. There is AC going to the cathode in the form of the signal super imposed on the DC current but that is coming from the signal path, not the power transformer.

Power cables make no objective difference in the sound of a stereo but, as pointed out, they provide a lot of profit for the companies who make them. Same with interconnects, digital cables, etc.