K
KurtBJC
Audioholic
That's definitely a more complicated topic than power cords...but I can give you a few thoughts on it here.Kurt,
Great article! I would be interested to hear your opinion on power conditioners and re-generators considering the perspectives in your article.
Are they something you consider un-necessary with money better spent on quality sources/amps with better designed power supplies? Are there any significant benefits to paying for that perfect 110 input sine wave?
Thanks,
-Brian
First, most of us in the USA have pretty good power, and well-designed power supplies will not have a lot of hiccups on it. Most of the time, hiccups are all we're really worried about, and for most of us, they just aren't exactly economically significant.
A mile down the road from our shop, my older brother does video tape dubbing work. He has a huge, and very expensive, power conditioner there because once upon a time mass VHS dubbing was a big part of his business and if there's a momentary hiccup in the power when you're in the middle of playing back a video tape you'll get a visible artifact of that hiccup--a dropout, for example. Now, if I'm watching TV in my living room and a hiccup causes a small dropout on my screen, that's no big deal. If, on the other hand, I was just dubbing 300 tapes simultaneously and there's a small dropout, I've got to go back and start all over again. I think that most of us, not being in the business of producing professional video, don't really mind if there's a little pop, squeak or dropout once in a great while, and a surge suppressor is really all we need unless we're prepared to get really obsessed with perfect, 100%-of-the-time video.
Not everybody has "pretty good power," though. My sister lived in Ketchikan in the 1970s when the power was pretty dodgy (don't know what it's like up there nowadays) and I've known others, especially in rural areas, whose power quality is pretty variable. In a case like that, I'd worry a bit more about the ability of a surge suppressor to deal with the potential for harm to equipment, and that would certainly argue for a good power conditioner.
Now, if you need a power conditioner, what to buy? I would ignore the consumer market completely because all of the units are silly, overpriced, glitzy things which are designed more to make your rack look high-end than to make your power clean. Go to a broadcast supply house (my favorite is our local, Westlake Electronic Supply, but there are many others) and get a professional unit. It'll cost less and work better. Do some research first--they're not all alike, and ideally it'd be good to know just what's the matter with your power so that you know what you're trying to fix.
Kurt
BJC