P 600 and my TV


I bought a used P600 and I just hooked up my TV (Pioneer Elite 55") and it will not turn on. Is my TV pulling more than 720 Watts? I find it hard to believe that I can't even run my TV on a $2,000+ piece of equipment.
chriskh
Douggieboy, The Power Plant 600 makes 720 watts of A/C power while the Exact Power makes 2000 watts. This is 66% more power than the large Power Plant 1200 that sells for $3950. Not bad for $1450.00 less money. Plus, per the PS website, the Power Plant 1200 needs a 220 volt line or it will only deliver 1000 watts. The Exact Power-2000 delivers much more current than any of the Power Plants and it does it from a smaller, much more efficient box that is much less costly to run. There is a link to a review of the Exact Power 2000 on their website at www.exactpower.com under the review section. Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity compared it to the Power Plant 600 and felt that the Exact Power was a better device. Check it out.
Hey, I'm running a Pioneer Elite Pro 97 on my PS Audio P600 powerplant just fine. Its been working every day since last May. AND, I really like the improved color and less smearing with the P600. Don't know what your problem is, since the Pro97 draws 275watts. I'm running the TV with everything except my Pass amp.
the review link on the exactpower website is dead. putting in a 220v plug is no problem here-- my contractor did one for the electric dryer in the basement. it's hard to deterime if the exactpower is actually recreating ac power as does the PS audio product, or is it modifying the input current. this isn't really important if what goes out into the system is cleaner, improving performance and extending the lifespan of the copmponents. i know that there are other applications for line conditioners, such as hospital and computer equipement, as well as the photographic use i mentioned in my first post. everybody who has told me they used computer voltage regulators for audio purposes says it actually makes things worse-- this leaves me wondering if similar products tailored to the medical industry do the same; my father is a retired MD, and the voltage regulators he used were quite inexpensive-- $2000 bought a trunk-sized 20kw unit that could power a full bio lab or hospital ward, with baby incubators, defibrillators, and electrocardiogram machines, which can cost alot more than money if they break down at the wrong time. models by tice and panamax show up on ebay once in a while, and a 2000 watt went for $128 plus shipping. it weighed over 50 pounds, so what exactly might have been in there? it obviously didn't command the kinds of prices we audiophiles pay for such things, but then again, who's to judge value-- it isn't what you pay, it's what you get for what you pay. that has always been my philosophy, and a good reason not to buy a plasma display just because it looks cool and i could afford it if i wanted one badly enough. happy new EARS everybody-- additional input is welcome--:)**