All US panels are already 240V, so there is no need to change a panel, unless you are doing a whole lot more than adding a couple amps. I had no problem adding 9 bitcoin miners to mine, and that was a continuous 70A load. Continuous. Cannot even imagine what one would need to do to actually need a bigger or upgraded panel. Even if more circuits are needed you simply buy a breaker called a thin twin that lets you put two 120V circuits in the same space as would normally be for just one. But whatever. If past experience is anything to go by it is unlikely anyone determined to spend money unnecessarily will be dissuaded. Hire an electrician and go for it.
When considering all the advice you will be getting, including from electricians, you might want to consider I have experience actually doing all this stuff. https://systems.audiogon.com/systems/8367 That’s a 240V to 120V Audio Consulting step down transformer you’re looking at there.
The advantage of 240V is power. Watts are power and voltage (pressure) times amps (current flow) equals power in watts. So the greater the voltage the greater the power. What this means in practical terms is faster charging of the amplifiers power supply caps. Amp power ultimately comes from the amps power supply, not the wall. But the caps are constantly being drained and topped off, and the faster the topping off the more dynamic the amp will sound.
That anyway is the theory. Whether it works or not is another thing altogether. Me personally, having tried and compared it several different ways, no way you would ever get me to run more than one line to a room. No matter how much money you gave me. And absolute last thing in the world would be to use more than one line and a bunch of dedicated grounds.
But hey, don’t take my word for it. Listen to Mikey. Skip to 15:50.
https://ultimist.com/video/2018/07/21/michael-fremers-listening-room/
When considering all the advice you will be getting, including from electricians, you might want to consider I have experience actually doing all this stuff. https://systems.audiogon.com/systems/8367 That’s a 240V to 120V Audio Consulting step down transformer you’re looking at there.
The advantage of 240V is power. Watts are power and voltage (pressure) times amps (current flow) equals power in watts. So the greater the voltage the greater the power. What this means in practical terms is faster charging of the amplifiers power supply caps. Amp power ultimately comes from the amps power supply, not the wall. But the caps are constantly being drained and topped off, and the faster the topping off the more dynamic the amp will sound.
That anyway is the theory. Whether it works or not is another thing altogether. Me personally, having tried and compared it several different ways, no way you would ever get me to run more than one line to a room. No matter how much money you gave me. And absolute last thing in the world would be to use more than one line and a bunch of dedicated grounds.
But hey, don’t take my word for it. Listen to Mikey. Skip to 15:50.
https://ultimist.com/video/2018/07/21/michael-fremers-listening-room/