Don Pearce wrote:
Glen,, please give it a rest. You aren't funny any more and this is
all becoming just a little boring.
And herein lies the problem with this group.
I ask a serious question, expecting some sensible responses, and instead
all I get are sarcastic comments.
The theory is sound anyway, if sticking an LCR filter across the mains
input does indeed reduce the noise floor. As reducing the noise floor
(by whatever means) improves dynamics. And this I have tested, I've
recently been involved in cleaning up some recordings made about 25
years ago on analogue equipment. This process involves re-EQ followed by
digital noise reduction, and the results before and after applying the
noise reduction are nothing short of dramatic.
This is using Nero Wave Editor (that comes with Nero Burning ROM), so no
fancy expensive software.
My question was a serious one, as it's obvious to anyone with any
knowledge of audio that lowering the noise floor will improve the sound.
So, I repeat. If you've got a lot of electrically noisy equipment on the
same ring main as the hi-fi (eg switching power supplies in PCs etc)
that's kicking out a lot of RF interference on the ring main, would it
not follow that eliminating (or at least greatly reducing) this noise,
and therefore providing a clean power feed to the amplifier and other
equipment, would lower the noise floor?
Once again, I'm not for a moment advocating spending £250 on something
from Russ Andrews. What I'm actually talking about is getting a standard
IEC lead for a couple of quid, then fitting a filtered 13A plug to it,
also for a couple of quid. At trade prices in single quantities this
will cost less than a fiver (which is actually less than you pay for a
standard IEC cable at places like PC World).
So, would someone like to provide a serious answer now?
--
Glenn Richards Tel: (01453) 845735
Squirrel Solutions
http://www.squirrelsolutions.co.uk/
IT consultancy, hardware and software support, broadband installation