
alund
Well-known member
Guys; what RACK mounted power strip should I use and why? I have about 8 plugs on the rack now… are all of these devices equal? Doubt it so I ask .. thanks
No noise is my main parameterI was just looking at the Black Lion Audio one. The reviews say it has good noise filtering. Starts at 120 bucks. Radial makes one now too.
I will never say spending is not important but my equipment requires protection more so than cost. Yes. That’s important too. I have only ever plugged into large surge protector on the floor.Are you feeding the power strip directly off the wall or are you running it through something to lower the voltage first. Depends how much you want to spend. Maybe a furman surge suppressor if it’s just for noise and a bit of safety.
Lol, a voltage regulator is probably going to be cost prohibitive in a rackmount format. Not sure what how big the rack is but either rackmount step down transformer or normal variac would probably be perfect to feed a rack power strip. Although the variac will take up a fair bit of space.I will never say spending is not important but my equipment requires protection more so than cost. Yes. That’s important too. I have only ever plugged into large surge protector on the floor.
I need better This thing looks like a dead armadillo on the ground and I can get stepped on etc…
Lol, a voltage regulator is probably going to be cost prohibitive in a rackmount format. Not sure what how big the rack is but either rackmount step down transformer or normal variac would probably be perfect to feed a rack power strip. Although the variac will take up a fair bit of space.
A variac allows you to set the exact voltage you want, for mine specifically I can go from 0-140ish volts. Nowadays most power is 120ish from the wall and will vary by region. Mine is anywhere from 112-125. Most older amps like around 110 and even newer stuff sounds a bit better under 120. It just allows for consistency in terms of sound and reliability as your aware and limiting the voltage into an amp.Tell me why a variac is important … does the power coming through a 110v fluctuate? And is it significant? Maybe the better question to begin is the understanding of a variac… it controls fluctuations in power correct?
Got it…. I would presume 3rd world countries would be terrible. But occasionally when high time of day is on and AC kicks on, lights show slight dimming.A variac allows you to set the exact voltage you want, for mine specifically I can go from 0-140ish volts. Nowadays most power is 120ish from the wall and will vary by region. Mine is anywhere from 112-125. Most older amps like around 110 and even newer stuff sounds a bit better under 120. It just allows for consistency in terms of sound and reliability as your aware and limiting the voltage into an amp.
They’re are spots in the first world where it’s pretty horrific, I can only imagine what the third worlds like. There’s a vid by bob gjika on variacs if you’d like to learn more.Got it…. I would presume 3rd world countries would be terrible. But occasionally when high time of day is on and AC kicks on, lights show slight dimming.
I’ll be checking it out. ThanksThey’re are spots in the first world where it’s pretty horrific, I can only imagine what the third worlds like. There’s a vid by bob gjika on variacs if you’d like to learn more.