Over the past week I’ve been running my entire front end on battery power: LTA MZ2 LPS, Innuos Pulse, Bryston BDA‑3, and Schiit Kara. The setup was straightforward, completely safe for the gear, and extremely convenient in day‑to‑day use.
This all started because I wanted a backup power solution for outages. While researching options, it dawned on me that a high‑quality inverter might also serve as a clean AC source for my system. I picked up the unit, added a new power strip, and set everything up in my listening room. After reading the manuals carefully, I began with the Kara — my least expensive component — just to be cautious. Everything behaved normally, so I added the streamer and DAC. Music flowed immediately.
Then came the real test: I pulled the charger’s plug from the wall. The system switched to battery power instantly, without even a hiccup. And the sound was fabulous.
I’m using the Ecoflow Delta 3 Plus, which provides 1800W continuous / 3600W peak output and has a pure sine‑wave inverter. My front end draws only about 80W total, so there’s ample headroom. It offers three IEC outlets plus four two‑prong outlets. For distribution, I’m using a Furman PL Plus‑C, mainly for convenience — its filtering is there if needed, but interestingly, my three solid‑state components are dead quiet even when plugged directly into the battery. Surge protection and voltage regulation are irrelevant here since the battery is the power source.
My routine is simple: the battery stays plugged in when I’m not listening. When I sit down for a session, I unplug the charger and the system runs purely on battery. No interruption, no drama, no shift in tonal balance. But one sonic change is unmistakable: Sibilance is gone. I’m very sensitive to it and have tried multiple approaches over the years. Battery power has produced the most dramatic reduction of all. When I shut down my tube preamp, I plug the charger back in and the cycle continues.
After five days of listening, I haven’t found a single downside. I didn’t think I had a power‑quality issue, but now I know my entire front end is isolated from the grid until the signal reaches my power amp. The reduction in sibilance suggests that some HF noise or interference may have been modulating the upper frequencies — and battery power simply removes that variable.
I’m curious whether anyone else has experimented with battery‑powered front ends and what results you heard.