I need to get rid of significant impulsive transients from a neighbor's electric fence. Let's assume I have no control over that situation.
https://keswitzer.wistia.com/medias/bv2t8odnn2
I also need a solution that doesn't cost thousands of dollars. Am I SOL?
A series-mode suppressor is what you want. Check out SurgeX, Brick wall, Zerosurge.
Bingo. That kind of stuff is on the line commonly. Most equipment simply filters it away.I find it really hard to believe that anything on the AC line will make it through the power transformer and electrolytic capacitors in a typical 'linear' power supply.
I'm prepared to bet its coupling onto ground somewhere, but probably not through the mains supply. A strong chance I think of a ground loop coupling.Maybe... Personally I'd get the BK Precision AC generator.
The ticks are high enough frequency that filtering might work, but you'll probably need a filter that works in the audio range and not the typical RFI line filters.
I find it really hard to believe that anything on the AC line will make it through the power transformer and electrolytic capacitors in a typical 'linear' power supply. That's why I would double-check to see if those capacitors are even doing their job. If not, replace them.
If the ticks are radiated into the circuits you might be able to improve the shielding such that they don't get in. Filtering could potentially also help depending on where the EMI gets in.
These types of issues are not always trivial to debug.
Tom
Wow - amazing. Well done for finding that.Everyone! I ran an extension wire over from my house to the fence charger and the problem went away. So we traced the lines in his barn and they went through a rheostat that controlled ceiling fans. The fans are long gone, so we took thar out of the circuit and... problem solved. Sometimes it's the littlest thing
Distortion in mains is a non-issue since it is rectified by the equipment's power supply. As long as the voltage remains steady over long periods, you shouldn't notice a change but it can happen. People often feel their systems sound better at night when ambient noise is lower and mains voltage is higher (and the mind is more relaxed?). If you have a lot of voltage variation over short periods like minutes or less, then the unit would provide some stability, especially in power amps with linear supplies.i'm late to the party but i'm curious. could your poor results be simply because your mains power is very clean already? My brother in law has this unit and it indicates incoming distortion at 6% and out at 0.2%. And voltage varies from 115-126 which the regenerator holds steady at 120v. We both thought the unit improved sound. Not sure that an incoming distortion ~1% can really be improved upon. No?
Welcome to ASR!i'm late to the party but i'm curious. could your poor results be simply because your mains power is very clean already? My brother in law has this unit and it indicates incoming distortion at 6% and out at 0.2%. And voltage varies from 115-126 which the regenerator holds steady at 120v. We both thought the unit improved sound. Not sure that an incoming distortion ~1% can really be improved upon. No?
No kidding! Those rectifier diodes absolutely clobber the mains signal.Distortion in mains is a non-issue since it is rectified by the equipment's power supply. As long as the voltage remains steady over long periods, you shouldn't notice a change but it can happen. People often feel their systems sound better at night when ambient noise is lower and mains voltage is higher (and the mind is more relaxed?). If you have a lot of voltage variation over short periods like minutes or less, then the unit would provide some stability, especially in power amps with linear supplies.
I'm in the same situation, My AC electrical power is pretty steady and clean. That, and most audio components regulate the DC for circuits that need that, so if the AC varies a bit, the regulated voltage won't significantly vary. Unless the AC is hideously bad, say from a poorly maintained generator in a rural setting, AC power regenerators really don't do anything useful for audio equipment. Although, again, as always, if you believe that the regenerator improves your audio experience, then you, and you alone will have a better experience, identical speaker terminal voltages notwithstanding.Man, I keep hearing about all of these places where the AC line voltage is varied, and dirty, and how it makes all sorts of clicks and pops on peoples' systems, but I have never experienced that ever in my life.
yeah, the highest measured was during the day and early morning. I first noticed this when I bought a power conditioner for my bass rig that had multiple inputs with delay turn on for each component. The meter on it was measuring 124vac at times so hook up my DMM and watched it for awhile and it was measuring 123Vac then drop to 119-120 then back up to 124 during the one hour. So bought one of the AC monitor displays and it was confirmed. So that's what lead me to buy the Furman for the Voltage regulation it had. I didn't what to damage my Vintage gear so use a Variac until I can make a bucking transformer AC input for the vintage gear since they transformer were made for the 115-117VAC.Man, I keep hearing about all of these places where the AC line voltage is varied, and dirty, and how it makes all sorts of clicks and pops on peoples' systems, but I have never experienced that ever in my life.