New Dedicated Line - Almost No improvement


Hello,

Newbie here and electrical idiot. Just moved to a new to us house in Tampa. Before we moved in I had an electrician put in a dedicated line (has it's own breaker switch) which is 10 gauge and two Furutech GTX-D outlets - Rhodium.

When I hooked up the EMI meter in my old house, which didn't have a dedicated line, the reading was usually around 26 or so IIRC. At the new house the outlets are 89 usually and the dedicated line is usually around 82 - so not much help for the cost of the "project" and pretty noisy.

Also, when the ac /hvac is running the meter reads about 100 points higher (!) for both the regular outlets and the dedicated Furutechs. Not good.

Thoughts? Does the dedicated line need it's own breaker box? 

I'm also considering a line conditioner but wanted to see what could be done here. Thanks.

laynes

Showing 1 response by fastfreight

Hi OP, many good thoughts here!  I formerly used an Inakustik 3500p power conditioner.  It did not throttle power and worked great.  I then installed dedicated 20 amp circuits (first two and then I liked them so much I installed another.  I need one duplex for the mono amps, one for the preamp and DAC, then I needed one more for the new streamer, and had other junk so oh well now I have three lines and six outlets.  I removed the power conditioner and found it sounded the same, so it is on the sidelines now.  I guess I am luckier about the noise as my background is dead quiet.  But I do wonder about the Rhodium Furutechs.  My friend got them and did not like them at all.  Sounded harsh and grainy.  I agree they many need burn in.  But how about an easy experiment?  Change one of them to a quality outlet but not Rhodium.  Something like a PS audio outlet (I have them everywhere) or Hubble if you can find one.  They are about 5 for $200 so much less expensive, and grip like nothing else (the PS Audio ones anyway).  These may sound much smoother in your system.  I have a spare outlet pm me if you want to try it!