Hard Wireing?


Greetings,I have a Pioneer 74txvi which is hard wired to a connector that connects to a circuit board inside the receiver. The wire is 18ga. Can I upgrade to a say a 12ga.power cord,& would this cause any problem with the receiver? AMB Danmar
128x128danmar123
How about adding an IEC chassis plug? You could put one in and use the 18ga. leads and solder them to the IEC. Would require a dremil tool w/metal cutting wheel. You could then make your own power cord (say 14 guage) and use Pass seymor/Marinco ends. Or...remove existing 18ga. power cord and replace w/16 guage lamp-cord or use Carol Cable 14/16 guage cord. You'll need rubber strain plug/strain relief that could be bought from True Value for around $2.50. You'll use the Carol Cable w/this set-up and make a splice w/the existing 18ga. wire. I've done many times on most of my inexpensive used audio gear. I've been doing this awhile and have experience/practice. Not hard but you have to know what your doing. Does it improve audio performance. I'd say yes it does. But you'll see greater audio improvement by adding better binding posts/rca plugs and rerouting low level wiring away from power wires. (Why are these bundled together?) Lots of little things could be done to improve the sound. If you confident you could do the job well, go for it if you plan on keeping the receiver for many more yrs. Please be careful. Honestly, like the previous member so stated, will not bring that much performance improvement. If you the itch for better 2-ch/stereo sound, look into quality int. amps/seperates. Good Luck!
Don't let these people discourage you from upgrading your
receiver.All you have to do is buy one of these:
http://www.sfcable.com/YL-3215.html.Plug in your receiver in the female end then plug in a power cord you want. I did this with my sony da777es receiver and now it sounds awesome with
my ps audio lab cable plugged into it. One thing what I would do first is replace your outlet with a hubbell 8300I hospital
grade. I do not recommend installing this yourself if you
haven't done this before. Ask for qualified help. Good luck!
Agreed with the prior post about
(A) not doing it yourself.
(B) do not simply hardwire a thicker gauge cable; use a quality female plug to facilitate the attachment of a quality external power cable.
(C) replace the crap wall plugs with (at a minimum) hospital grade wall receptacles.
(D) a dedicated power line to the breaker box is the logical extension of this (eventually).

Without prejudice to (a) and (b) above, Not sure whether the cost / reward on your receiver will pan out for you. I would have the qualified technician assess it for before you jump in.

Good luck