Something related: http://ifi-audio.com/audio_blog/pop-goes-dsd-why-does-this-happen/
..thx buddy...looks like I'm stuck the annoying pops...sigh
Hi Yoga, thank you for joining.
Late to the party here, thinking about getting a second hand Lumin A1. You guys love the Lumins!
I am also considering the Aurender N10 with either the MSB Analog (with Quad USB and Power Base) or TotalDAC d1-dual. A single unit (for considerably less) seems like a bit of a bargain in comparison. I have the Simaudio Moon Neo 430 headphone amplifier.
Quick question, what do you think is the better investment, Kenneth Lau PSU or Shunyata Digital cable? The latter is not restricted to the Lumin, of course.
Hello, by the way :¬)
What do you mean by the Shunyata Digital cable? I have a Python AES digital, two Anaconda AES digital, two Alpha Digital power cords, and one Sigma Digital power cord. Or are you referring to another type of cable. FYI, I have the Sigma Digital on my Lumin S1 power supply.
Actually, on rereading I think you are referring to power cord for the Lumin. I looked into the PSU upgrade, decided not to do it for now, but forgot the reason. If I did I will still use the Shunyata power cord since its job is to filter noise generated by the PSU from getting back into the other components.
Your latter statement is the correct one, the linear PSU or power cable. I'm opting for the former after asking a few owners. I'll be sourcing a medical grade power cable which is (obviously) highly insulated and well built for the time being :¬)
Late to the party here, thinking about getting a second hand Lumin A1. You guys love the Lumins!
I am also considering the Aurender N10 with either the MSB Analog (with Quad USB and Power Base) or TotalDAC d1-dual. A single unit (for considerably less) seems like a bit of a bargain in comparison. I have the Simaudio Moon Neo 430 headphone amplifier.
Quick question, what do you think is the better investment, Kenneth Lau PSU or Shunyata Digital cable? The latter is not restricted to the Lumin, of course.
Hello, by the way :¬)
Power cords don't filter anything but they can have a measurable effect on equipment and its easy enough to measure the performance of the power cord as well.
I can go into in more depth if you like.
Power cords don't filter anything but they can have a measurable effect on equipment and its easy enough to measure the performance of the power cord as well.
I can go into in more depth if you like.
I've kept up on technology just fine. What is needed here is a clarification of terms.
A 'power conditioner' conditions the AC power getting to the equipment in use.
Blocking noise that that particular piece is making is not a power conditioner- its a filter.
The best power conditioners that we have seen were made by Elgar- and had the ability to produce a sine wave of less than 0.1% THD with a full load of 28 amps continuous at 117V. In addition they could hold the line voltage steady while the load varied. I've seen no 'high end audio' power conditioners that could do that.
These power cords can do none of that, although they are nice power cords and I imagine they might be able to block certain high frequency components generated by the equipment they serve from getting back on the line. But FWIW one of the more pesky artifacts that can get on the AC line is the 5th harmonic, and these power cords can't filter that- they simply don't have what is needed in them to do it. For that matter, most 'high end audio' power conditioners don't either.
The 5th harmonic causes power transformers to run with noise and to run hotter; it causes power rectifiers to radiate more RF energy and creates adverse forces in AC synchronous motors that make them want to run backwards. Its caused by AC power transformers (like the one outside on a power pole) that has enough of a load on its secondary that the transformer begins to distort the AC waveform. Most high end audio power conditioner companies ignore this phenomena because its expensive to remove.