To condition or not ?


Hello All,

    In the owners manual for my newly purchased Origin Live Resolution TT they state ; “ Plug the motor pod into a mains plug. We suggest omitting mains conditioners , filters or anything with surge protection as these can be highly detrimental for performance. The aforementioned items inflict no damage so you can experiment with their inclusion if you wish”. Ummm…I’m  confused ? I have an audioquest integra 1200 conditioner. Is there some reason not to use this for the TT? They seem to contradict themselves ? 
Thank You All.

detroitwing

Showing 2 responses by lewm

On the SOTA, it IS a magnet but that is one half of the device called a Hall Sensor, used in many vintage DD turntables, like my Kenwood L07D, and by Phoenix Engineering which designed the speed control system used in the SOTA Eclipse. I agree that an AC regenerator would be redundant in the SOTA Eclipse system, because that job is done already by the power supply that is part of the Eclipse. However, if your turntable does not inherently regenerate AC, then an external regenerator might be of some benefit. At the very least, it will shield the other front end equipment from any noise in the form of EMI that might be put back into the AC supply for those other components by the motor itself.

Most TT motors draw less than 25W (which in a 120V system means less than ~0.2A), so I doubt that any conditioner (not a regenerator, but a conditioner that uses filters to remove hash from AC) suitable to work in an audio system would limit current draw by the TT motor. I would not put such a device on an amplifier, however, unless I knew it was rated to deliver a multiple of the steady state current draw of the amplifier.

You’re correct; they contradict themselves in the space of one paragraph. I see no reason why any of the named devices could do damage. Some might affect sound quality up or down, but that’s about it. And nothing protects against a direct lightning strike . Anything on an affected AC line would be toast.