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- Jan 14, 2011
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- 75,470
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- Gillette, Wyo.
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- Halfbiass...Electron Herder and Backass Woof
Forgot about fitz43's offer already?? Better jump on that, he was VERY reasonable about it...
Forgot about fitz43's offer already?? Better jump on that, he was VERY reasonable about it...
Do you have cable coming into the house?? We've had some members who had problems with hum induced by the cable guy.
Does the WOPL have a 2 prong plug?
you cannot have more than one grounded 3 prong plug in your system unless you want ground loops and the associated hum. This is especially true if you have a cable connection (as in cable TV) to any component in your system. If you have a cable connection to a cable box and that cable box has copper audio connections to your system, then you will have hum. Your copper connections from the cable box should be exchanged for an optical, digital TOSLINK connection instead.The WOPL has a two prong plug. The non WOPL has a three prong plug. It was the dual primary transformer kind. So maybe they used a three prong in production of those particular amps for some reason? Jerry says he's never seen a gray three prong on an PL before. But I have. My dad has two of them like that. And two that are not. Not sure what Phase was doing there, but the cords look original. Thats even what the original owner of the other 700B told me when I bought it. (Three prong meaning ground Lee)? I assume that's what you are driving at there? I wish they all were like that in the first place. :-/
you cannot have more than one grounded 3 prong plug in your system unless you want ground loops and the associated hum. This is especially true if you have a cable connection (as in cable TV) to any component in your system. If you have a cable connection to a cable box and that cable box has copper audio connections to your system, then you will have hum. Your copper connections from the cable box should be exchanged for an optical, digital TOSLINK connection instead.
If you do not have a decoder in your surround pre-processor to allow this type of connection, there are high quality audio transformer couplers that allow you to break this troublesome hum link and use copper cables instead.
I rely on the TOSLINK connection. You get the benefit of digital meta data transfer to the pre-processor that does not exist if you take the transformer coupled route.
Interesting. Well luckily I have NO components in my rack that are for tv or video. This is strictly an audio component rack. Speaker wires run from the rack accross the fire place over to massive speakers on the other side of the room. My Rotel pre amp, and one PL 700B have three prongs. My Sangeean HD tuner, Pioneer 6-Disc changer, Tech-Pro equalizer, Electronic Bi-amp X-over Filter and second PL 700B all have two prongs. As well as the two pronged Phase Linear fan that was made to plug into the back of the PL 700B. Which we know only accepts two prongs. Note, the Monster Power Isolation unit in the stack has a HUGE 2" thick grounded power cable that plugs into the wall. And the unit has six pairs of standard 120V AC outlets. So at any time, only TWO devices are plugged into the same isolated filter. So on my time delay outlet, I will have the PL 700B three prong, and the WOA PL 700B two prong, on the same isolated outlet in the back of the monster power center. How does this explain why the one 700B has no noise and the other does? These outlets are all isolated from each other? And since there was no Hum before I even began this project, I have to think that it has something to do with what's been done to the inside of the amp? Below is a photo of only and all that's connected in my set-up at the moment. The bi-amp filter is a small box that is behind the amp. So its not seen in the photo. But it's there. This is strictly a 2-channel sound system.
Turning the plug around? Lee............Really? I better return my degree to my college if that's true.
View attachment 9765View attachment 9763
120 coming into the house has Line, neutral and ground. At the main breaker panel neutral and ground are treated the same, although with separate bus bars they are connected within that panel. On a branch feeder circuit they are kept separate until they return to the main panel. IF ANY other electrical apparatus is plugged into the same circuit there is a potential for hum based solely on the fact that if your neutral tab is running with the line on the other stuff, then your line is running with their neutral......./
The reason for polarized receptacles. Large blade and small blade plugs.
I have 3 Crown DC-300's in my upstairs rack Dave.
All three have 3 prong plugs on them. None of my other equipment has 3 prong plugs on it.
If any 2 of the Crowns are plugged into my isolated power bus (I have a Topaz 2.5KVA Ultra-Isolator isolation transformer) with the safety ground attached = hum.
If only a single Crown is plugged into the power bus with the safety ground connected = no hum.
Other 2 DC-300s have cheater plugs attached to defeat the ground loop induced hum.