Another dedicated circuit question


(I just wrote a novel, and I tried to paste a couple of links, and the whole thing disappeared, so as I type slowly and poorly, I am going with the condensed version this time.)

About 25 years ago I put in three dedicated circuits for my gear.  (That was before I had a PC & internet, so I am sure that I must have gotten the idea from Stereophile, and as with all things, I thought bigger was better and more was best.)  Recently I have been reading a number of dedicated circuit threads and discovered that I had made numerous errors.  Therefore I have been up in my attic and into my panel for the last week or so removing, replacing, and rerouting and I was about done

and then

I found out that three dedicated lines was another mistake I made.  No biggy:  I bought a lot of Romex and other stuff I didn't need and spent some extra time I didn't need to spend, but I can rectify the three-circuit-RFI that I introduced by turning 'off' two of my three system circuit breakers.  Right?

But my question is:  since I need four outlets (digital source, pre, amp, powered sub) is the BEST solution to put another outlet in series with my one dedicated outlet?

Are there any power-strip solutions that are of an acceptable grade?  After the last dedicated circuit thread, I wound up discussing this (to some extent) with @millercarbon  and I told him about a power conditioner I bought around 25 years ago called the Promethean Audio Products Power Flo (sorry MC, I got the name slightly wrong) and he suggested that in the interim I use that as my strip.  What I neglected to tell him was that it occasionally arcs at the outlet when unplugging/plugging it in, and I am a bit leery of it.

Here is where my previous novel I had typed disappeared on me, so I am not going to try to pate any links this time,  but price is a consideration and MD sells the Furman PST-*D Power Station (8 outlets) for $269 + tax which is withing my range, but it says to use only on 15A circuits (meaning I would have to put a 15A outlet & breaker on either end of the 12-2 that makes up my one dedicated circuit.

MD also sells, for $40 + tax, the Audioquest IEC-3 power strip (three outlets) and I guess I would need two of them (plus two cords) as one of the reviews say that the outlets are too close together to use all three of them at once.

Are either of these an acceptable (meaning minimal degradation) method to add outlets to one dedicated circuit?  Are there any other methods (excluding multiple hundreds or thousands of dollars on a power conditioner) that I could consider?

In a reply to this post, I am going to attempt to paste links to the two options I just mentioned.

 

 

 

immatthewj

I am with Matthew, above, and I wrote about it, below.  Personally I believe that a good power conditioner can be better than dedicated lines:

 

 

I have the Audioquest. It would certainly be a way to add more outlets. It doesn't do anything.  No filtering or protection, but it is a quality product.

 

@jgoldrick  , for now I can live with only adding more outlets.  Were you able to use all three of the audioquest's outlets?  I take it you noted no perceptible degradation by using it?  And lastly, what are you using for a power cord to connect it to the wall?

@immatthewj 

I found out that three dedicated lines was another mistake I made. 

Not really... If the correct type of branch circuit wiring is used, and the correct method of installing the branch circuit wiring is used.

I have two dedicated 20 amp branch circuits that are 75ft each. I used 10/2 NM sheathed cable, (Romex Trade name). Both circuits are fed from breakers on the same Line, leg. I use one for front end digital equipment and the other for analog. My system is dead quiet. Theory for keeping digital equipment fed off a different circuit than analog is  to decouple the power supplies from one another. 

 

MD sells the Furman PST-*D Power Station (8 outlets) for $269 + tax which is withing my range, but it says to use only on 15A circuits

Where did you read that?

This?

  • Maximum Current Rating15 (Amps)

That means the maximum FLA of the "power Station" not the branch circuit rating. You can plug it into a 15A (Duplex) or a 20A outlet that is feed from a 20 amp branch circuit.