What kind of outlet wall plate do yo use?


I was reading a post over on AA last week. The post was about outlet wall plates, non magnetic stainless steel wall plates.

I had seen these posts in the past on AA but always passed them over never really reading them. This time I took the time to read the post and reponses to it.

To cut to the chase I went out and found some non magnetic stainless steel outlet plates at a lumber yard. I must stop here and tell you I was a bit skeptical that I would hear any difference in sound from my system.

I pulled the plastic plates from my 3 dedicated duplex outlets and installed the ss plates. I plugged the equipment back in and turned on the system. I let it warm up for about a half hour and then sat down for a listen.

The first CD I listened to was Diana Krall, "The Girl in The Other Room." I could hear a difference right off, but not for the better. Sound stage was small, Krall's piano sounded like a blanket had been thrown over it. The air had been let out of the music.
I listened to a few other CDs with the same results.

I then carefully pulled the ss plates from the outlets for the preamp and the power amp. Just sliding them down on the cords out of the way. I sat back down for a listen. Every thing was back as it was before I had installed the ss plates.

I should mention here my preamp is a Sonic Frontiers line-1, and the power amp is an Audio Research VT50.
The three 20 amp branch circuits are installed in EMT conduit. The rough-in boxes are 4"x4" 2 1/8" deep with a single gang raised device cover for the sheetrock wall and electrical outlet mounting. Wire is #10 awg solid THHN copper. Recepts Leviton 20A Hosp Grade. Branch circuit breakers single pole Square D OQ. Branch circuits breakers installed on the same line in the panel. Distance from electrical panel less than 25ft.

I still was puzzled why there was any difference in sound at all. I then, just for the hell of it, installed two leviton stainless steel plates. One for the power amp outlet and the other for the preamp outlet. A magnet will stick to the leviton plates like gorilla glue...

I plugged the gear back in, turned on the system and let it warm up for about a half hour or so. I then sat down for a listen. The sound, not bad. Remember this is the electrical wall outlet plate. First impressions the sound is darker, vocals smoother, more body, fuller.

I will compare the leviton ss plate to the plastic plate later after my ears have had a chance to adjust to this new sound.

Have any of you guys experimented with the wall outlet cover plates?
Why is there a difference in sound? When I first read the post I thought maybe it was due to the rigidity effect the plate was placing on the electrical outlet. Was it working as a damper of sorts. I mean a non magnetic ss cover plate verses a plastic plate.
Why did the non magnetic ss plate degrade the sound of my system?
With the Leviton ss plates are they providing shielding, in effect a Faraday cage.

By the way I asked the person, who posted the thread, why the plate changed the sound on his system. Some of those tweakers can be quite defensive when you question them. Though he was not others were.
I also should mention the member is using solid state gear.

Jim

jea48

Showing 5 responses by c5150

Oh ....hold that thought.

Merry Christmas to all

I'm back on the 3rd of Jan.....happy new year as well.

So try to keep it interesting while i'm GON. LOL
crazy you say ...

I actually went as far as to eliminate the cover and the outlets altogether. I'm hardwired from the fusebox to the component . There is a huge difference.All of them...with seperate fuses for each component.
12-19-05: Onhwy61
The best outlet plate is no outlet plate. An outlet plate can only add distortion, eliminate it if you can. This tweak cost absolutely $0.00. Be bold, expose your outlets and join the coverless revolution.

YES SIR.... The thing to do is loosen the outlet and let it hang.If you don't want that extreme..then loosen the screws just a bit.No a/b listening.....that's wrong. Let it play for about 24 hours with the volume on low.Actually play while you sleep (repeat). Not 2 hour warm up.
The joke is on you....

All my components are hardwired ,on the component side. On the fusebox side ...I have seperate fuses for each component. Yes ,the wires are screwed in,(NOT TIGHT) as they would be if regular 14gauge solid core. I don't use 14 g wire. It blows away all ...and i mean all other set ups available on the hi-fi scene.

Now that is true dedicated circuit....
You know when....

A hair trigger on a shotgun...fine sensitive fishing line. when balancing a house of cards..,It doesn't take much pressure ,energy or vibration to sense or feel this things happen ,move or shift.

When you make a change in an audio system ,whether this be wall plate ,ac cord ,brass feet ,and all the minor yet sensitive moves one does do, it must ,your gear, be sensitive enough to feel the change. Your system is too massive.Mass....as in not only heavy but too tight,too many blockages as in you rack . Hey how many guys gear is not even level or centered on the racks.Balance...Or your walls have not enough give in them .Too much absorption etc...Too much furniture in your room....MASS

Your gear or system includes all of the contents of your room. Including the walls. The same gear in an empty room will not sound the same in an over crowed ,over saturated ,dead room. How do you expect to hear the difference. This is basic science. But hi-fi has to answer to no natural laws it seems....Becauce a few guys with bad systems, ( great # 1 brands a-list stuff) but set up like really bad ...all that is sensed ,experienced and measured is snake oil...

If you system cannot ....cannot ,in 24 hours of changing ac cords.If you cannot hear ,sense ,experience a change....I don't care good or bad.....You changed the bloody cords ,there will be a bloody change.

If there is no change.. 1) your ears are not sensitive enough ...2) your "whole" system etc ..is not sensitive enough

"whole" means the room and ALL it's contents in it!