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The perfect earth
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<blockquote data-quote="Camissa" data-source="post: 1101633" data-attributes="member: 22505"><p>If you want to remove noise, a matt works better than poles. A matt of thin, wide copper bands (like bandaid) would actually be best. You want to keep the connection from your system to the matt as short as possible and make sure there is only one path to earth. </p><p></p><p>The sole purpose for the new dedicated hifi earth is to lower the noise floor and provide close to zero resistance to earth for the bonded group of devices. The earth leakage breaker and the normal circuit breaker in the main DB board would still trip if anything goes wrong, a dedicated hifi earth does not jeopardise safety. It is standard practice in many sensitive environments - why not in our beloved hifi systems? </p><p></p><p>My new earth cost me about 7k. From a value for money point of view this was the best investment in my system ever. </p><p></p><p>Kind regards</p><p>Ecki</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Camissa, post: 1101633, member: 22505"] If you want to remove noise, a matt works better than poles. A matt of thin, wide copper bands (like bandaid) would actually be best. You want to keep the connection from your system to the matt as short as possible and make sure there is only one path to earth. The sole purpose for the new dedicated hifi earth is to lower the noise floor and provide close to zero resistance to earth for the bonded group of devices. The earth leakage breaker and the normal circuit breaker in the main DB board would still trip if anything goes wrong, a dedicated hifi earth does not jeopardise safety. It is standard practice in many sensitive environments - why not in our beloved hifi systems? My new earth cost me about 7k. From a value for money point of view this was the best investment in my system ever. Kind regards Ecki [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
The perfect earth
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