Added AC line chokes inside CD changer...


From other experiments I know each CD changer I own adds about '700' noise to the AC line. *the noise tester runs from 000 to 999 for testing audio AC lines. The average PS Audio noise Sniffer can eat up about 150 to 200. just for an example.  
I decided to add a pair of chokes to the AC wiring inside the CD changer (plenty of space) I had on hand a pair of MIller 5502 chokes left over from a Magnepan tweak. I put one on the hot, one on the neutral.  So they look sturdy enough to be used for 120v.  
The thing is, the incoming AC voltage is only 60v/60v balanced (technical) power anyway.Stuck them in sloppy soldering and all. Wrapped the leads up with Teflon tape...Sound is slightly smoother with ten minutes of listening..Sadly I do NOT have the tester noise sniffer handy to see what they did to lower the noise exiting the player...Now f I can only find the 5520 chokes I never used.. They seem to be lost.. (so I can do the other changer I use. I was going to use the 5520 in the first place. but as I wrote, they have vanished into the wilds of my junk piles.
elizabeth
This thread has officially entered The Twilight Zone.. Any electrical stuff presented as math immediately means the Universe  (at least in this thread... )  is about to implode... 
Thank you guys, it was fun...Until my brain exploded seeing the equations...(Actually I was good at Calculus.. fifty years ago...)
I finally “got” calculus in college. Seeing it in the context of electronics made it crystal clear to me. Funny thing was some of the ones who 
were math wizards in high school couldn’t grasp the fundamentals of electronics. I survived in spite of it all :-)