I am thinking about one of the better power conditioner plugged into an APC computer UPS with battery. The battery is only to keep power coming when there is an outage. It's the audiophile grade power conditioner that corrects for problems. What I don't know are: (1) can the conditioner correct for typical square wave generation from the battery; (2) I heard it switches to battery mode during outage, thus is it true that during normal operation the power conditioner would receive fully non-filtered electricity capable of handling things like transient current spike needed for the amplifier. Manufacturers of audiophile grade power conditioners would most likely expect you to plug their equipment directly into a wall outlet, and not through a possibly filtered system like the UPS. So the easiest way to find out would be asking if anybody plug their power conditioner into a computer battery back up and find no degradation in sound.
Power conditioner plugged into computer battery
I would prefer plugging a power conditioner into a computer back up battery. At least when the electricity went out for a short time, the stereo system does not get shut down. Has anybody found out that the typical computer battery/surge protector limit the amp current or create other sound problems. If yes, is this true across all conditioners or that certain ones manage to be immune. Thank you.
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- 14 posts total
- 14 posts total