FlexibleAudio
Member
This looks like an informative "commercial" .
I'm just starting to get my arms around this.
Le Roy,
Lots of people love the regenerators. IMO they are indeed good at reconstructing the incoming power but they are not the best solution for the high instantaneous current required by amplifiers. I see the three "holy grails" of a properly designed electrical foundations follows:
1) Block the system from the outside without limiting instantaneous current or operating current.
2) Star ground the system to avoid ground loops caused by electrical potential deltas at each component's ground without limiting either instantaneous current or operating current to each component.
3) Isolate each component from the significant other components in the system without limiting instantaneous current or operating current.
I believe the best overall soulution for item (1) is to size an isolation transformer as follows: Define the rated current and the maximum instantaneous current for your entire system. Choose a SOTA isolation transformer sized were the transformer rating less the systems rated current is equal to or greater than your systems maximum instantaneous current. A good rule of thumb for instantaneous current (if not available) is 3 to 4 times rated current.
I believe Torus (Piltron) make the best isolation transformer available. If you could size a regenerator large enough to achieve a reserve of this magnitude I think they would be fine but IMO it makes little sense to put a $5000 amp with limited output in front of a $50,000 amp that is capable of extreme speed (slew rate) and dynamics which can only be achieved through available instantaneous current.
Using regenerators for your front end is another matter, but you still need to clean up the incoming power for your amps so why not use a properly sized isolation transformer for your entire system then the outside noise is blocked and your amps have access to massive current. At this point, star grounding (item 2) and component isolation (item 3) are the only remaining objectives and I think there are less obtrusive ways to isolate components than regeneration.