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In Reply to: RE: Be sure both circuits are on the same AC leg. posted by kenster on May 23, 2010 at 16:53:25
Kenster, what's this all about? Chasing down mechanical vibrations in the circuit breaker box? Or is this something else? Please enlighten.
Follow Ups:
Hey bartc,
Not to be rude, but I have been advocating vibration transduction for quite some time here on the AA and hardly anybody has taken notice...
It's only when unique applications come up, of which many I have already addressed at length, that catches peoples attention and this is sad as mitigating vibration infiltration, not only in components but the incoming AC, is key to getting high resolution from ones system.
The Yamma-tek vibration transducers are a unique product that myself and another AA inmate have developed using superior materials and are confident in their effective transducer efficiency.
Wanna know more?
~
Kenster,
Yes, I do want to know more.
Kenster, I knew about vibes on power cables creating microphonics that interfere. I did not think as far as the breaker box, but why not? OK, so I get it.
Now tell us all more about this product.
Thanks.
See my reply to dmzwizard...
~
Yes,
Please do and where did you get them. By the way are GFCI's noisey?
I'm supposing that they are.
I got the idea from the Golden Sound acoustic discs, which are mainly marketed for room acoustic control, and while a patent/trademark search turned up nothing on the GS discs, myself and another AA inmate felt they could be improved upon as I found they were very effective at mitigating micro vibrations from IC's, speaker cables, power cords, AC receptacles/plugs, CD drives/motors, capacitors, PCB's, transformers ETC.We developed them from what started out as stacks of coins, both American and Japanese, to trying different materials from wood to plastic. They are still in the development stage at this point but the material(s) we are currently using have proven VERY effective. We may develop different models down the line as we fine tune them for different applications.
The current issue we are facing is the manufacturer that was stamping out the discs for us in his spare time decided it was not worth his time so we are currently looking for a replacement.
I heard that GFCI's can be noisy but I don't use them in either of my systems so I don't have 1st hand experience with them. Maybe someone else can chime in about this...
~
Edits: 05/26/10
I don't use GFCI's in my system's wiring scheme either, but there are 4 of them as part of the house wiring and I was wondering if they could be a source of A/C line noise, any thoughts?
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