Power Chords and Line Conditioning


Does a good power chord do the same thing as a line conditioner does? I hear in terms of performance that they both provide lower noise floors and with less hash and white noise. They tend to tighten up loose bass and smooth out the overall presentation of the signal. Just curious before I purchase either one of the two mentioned. Thanks
martice
I would suggest you start with the power cords. A good budget to work with is 10% of your investment in each piece of equipment. You must spend the time tring a few, and be sure to listen for over an hour to see if the initial WOW is not something you'll grow to hate. Cords like any wiring require a break-in (allowing the electrons to align) so if you can try used ones that is perfect! Also I would suggest you purchase used cords. They tend to loose 50% of there value right out of the box, but then retain the remaining value for years. Once you've found good cords you'll be in a far better position to evaluate conditioners (if you need one)
I think most would agree that a decent power conditioner does more to improve sound (especially in areas of dirty AC) than any power cord by itself. For example, reduction in noise floor is major with a Power Wedge, and huge with a Cinepro Line Balancer, and for uncontroversial theoretical reasons. It's amazing that power cords can help as much as they do, and that, I believe, is less well understood. But I'd certainly start with the power conditioner. Does anyone disagree? I'd be interested to hear.
Oops, I see that Jadem6 DOES disagree. I've only done it one way myself, but having both good power cords on hand (Stealth HAC) and an excellent power conditioner (Cinepro 20 Line Balancer) as well, I suppose I could experiment. But I won't, since I'm 99.9% sure already that if I remove the Cinepro from my system, the plunge in quality will make me not want to listen, even for the period of an experiment.