OK, so you have two D.O.'s (duplex outlets) are they both on the same circuit? My advice would be to turn them each into a 20A dedicated circuit, if there's room on your panel for two more 20a breakers. Tip: when you create two or more ded. cts., shuffle the other breakers/circuits around in the panel box if necessary so that all your ded. cts. are on the same side of the neutral bar in the panel box. Otherwise parts of your system will be running on AC power that is out of phase with the AC running other parts of your system ;-)
This will not cost a lot of money (should be around $500 for materials and a licensed electrician.) And will always add to the quality of anything you may do powerwise later on.
If your utility company provides steady power within a couple volts of 120 VAC +/- (measure it yourself at different times of the day/night with a simple volt/ohm meter from Rat Shack) then this may be all you need. If you need more outlets, you can buy plain audiophile 4 or 8 plug boxes, star-wired on short pigtail cords, and with no switches, filters, breakers or other crap. Get one box with RFI filters (just a couple of capacitors), on its outlets for your digital components. That will prevent them from injecting digital hash into the rest of your power wiring.
This will not cost a lot of money (should be around $500 for materials and a licensed electrician.) And will always add to the quality of anything you may do powerwise later on.
If your utility company provides steady power within a couple volts of 120 VAC +/- (measure it yourself at different times of the day/night with a simple volt/ohm meter from Rat Shack) then this may be all you need. If you need more outlets, you can buy plain audiophile 4 or 8 plug boxes, star-wired on short pigtail cords, and with no switches, filters, breakers or other crap. Get one box with RFI filters (just a couple of capacitors), on its outlets for your digital components. That will prevent them from injecting digital hash into the rest of your power wiring.