John,
I read this somewhere... not sure if it accurate as I am not familiar with Shunyata.
Is it possible that the Hydra 8 dynamics might have been limited by the power cord you used?
I honestly can't fathom how a power cord (just wires with no active components) could limit dynamics unless it was a lot smaller gauge than the household wiring and seriously too small in a gauge for the required current/power demands of the amp (a "bottle neck" so to speak).
If for a moment, I take off the audiophile hat (it sounds better, as many people swear by Shunyata) and, instead, I put on an Engineering hat; logically, if a power amp dynamics are sensitive enough to respond to the 6 foot power cord copper wire then it really speaks volumes about the amplifier's lack of capacitive energy storage in its power supply (used for transients) rather than saying anything at all about a piece of wire between the amp and the wall outlet.
Sorry for the brief interlude in engineering madness...and back to regular programing.
I read this somewhere... not sure if it accurate as I am not familiar with Shunyata.
Hydra Power conditioners do NOT come with power cords. This is because Shunyata believes that power cords are a component not a throw-away.
Is it possible that the Hydra 8 dynamics might have been limited by the power cord you used?
I honestly can't fathom how a power cord (just wires with no active components) could limit dynamics unless it was a lot smaller gauge than the household wiring and seriously too small in a gauge for the required current/power demands of the amp (a "bottle neck" so to speak).
If for a moment, I take off the audiophile hat (it sounds better, as many people swear by Shunyata) and, instead, I put on an Engineering hat; logically, if a power amp dynamics are sensitive enough to respond to the 6 foot power cord copper wire then it really speaks volumes about the amplifier's lack of capacitive energy storage in its power supply (used for transients) rather than saying anything at all about a piece of wire between the amp and the wall outlet.
Sorry for the brief interlude in engineering madness...and back to regular programing.