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#1
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I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. |
#2
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U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote:
I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It's not really necessary, but it makes things a lot easier. And in a typical commercial facility, you'll find also that the studio electronics are actually a fairly small part of the total load. The air conditioning system usually dwarfs the actual electronics load. It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. It is totally unnecessary with properly grounded equipment. The chances that everything in a given studio will be properly grounded is pretty close to zero. It helps to carefully design a signal grounding system, but some gear will still need modification to get rid of pin 1 stupidity on the part of the manufacturer. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
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U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote:
I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It's not really necessary, but it makes things a lot easier. And in a typical commercial facility, you'll find also that the studio electronics are actually a fairly small part of the total load. The air conditioning system usually dwarfs the actual electronics load. It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. It is totally unnecessary with properly grounded equipment. The chances that everything in a given studio will be properly grounded is pretty close to zero. It helps to carefully design a signal grounding system, but some gear will still need modification to get rid of pin 1 stupidity on the part of the manufacturer. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#4
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On 12 Jul 2004 11:46:44 -0400, Scott Dorsey wrote:
U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote: I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It's not really necessary, but it makes things a lot easier. And in a typical commercial facility, you'll find also that the studio electronics are actually a fairly small part of the total load. The air conditioning system usually dwarfs the actual electronics load. It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. It is totally unnecessary with properly grounded equipment. The chances that everything in a given studio will be properly grounded is pretty close to zero. Ahh . . good point. Thanks |
#5
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On 12 Jul 2004 11:46:44 -0400, Scott Dorsey wrote:
U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote: I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It's not really necessary, but it makes things a lot easier. And in a typical commercial facility, you'll find also that the studio electronics are actually a fairly small part of the total load. The air conditioning system usually dwarfs the actual electronics load. It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. It is totally unnecessary with properly grounded equipment. The chances that everything in a given studio will be properly grounded is pretty close to zero. Ahh . . good point. Thanks |
#6
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U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote:
I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." It's more like all your recording gear on the same circuit breaker. And all else on other breaker(s), like Scott stated, hi voltage stuff like AC units and most every other major appliance in your home should not be on the same lead as your recording gear. You will also want to remember the guitar amps, etc., that will be in your studio. |
#7
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U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote:
I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." It's more like all your recording gear on the same circuit breaker. And all else on other breaker(s), like Scott stated, hi voltage stuff like AC units and most every other major appliance in your home should not be on the same lead as your recording gear. You will also want to remember the guitar amps, etc., that will be in your studio. |
#8
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On 12 Jul 2004 17:37:04 GMT, Raymond wrote:
U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote: I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." It's more like all your recording gear on the same circuit breaker. And all else on other breaker(s), like Scott stated, hi voltage stuff like AC units and most every other major appliance in your home should not be on the same lead as your recording gear. You will also want to remember the guitar amps, etc., that will be in your studio. Major appliances in my house run off both legs. . . . (220~240) But I'll definitly watch the fridge outlets. |
#9
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On 12 Jul 2004 17:37:04 GMT, Raymond wrote:
U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote: I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." It's more like all your recording gear on the same circuit breaker. And all else on other breaker(s), like Scott stated, hi voltage stuff like AC units and most every other major appliance in your home should not be on the same lead as your recording gear. You will also want to remember the guitar amps, etc., that will be in your studio. Major appliances in my house run off both legs. . . . (220~240) But I'll definitly watch the fridge outlets. |
#10
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I generally recommend all power amps (excepting HdPhone amps) be on
thier own breaker (of the studio leg) as well. Is this not typical? Thanks, DM "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote: I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It's not really necessary, but it makes things a lot easier. And in a typical commercial facility, you'll find also that the studio electronics are actually a fairly small part of the total load. The air conditioning system usually dwarfs the actual electronics load. It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. It is totally unnecessary with properly grounded equipment. The chances that everything in a given studio will be properly grounded is pretty close to zero. It helps to carefully design a signal grounding system, but some gear will still need modification to get rid of pin 1 stupidity on the part of the manufacturer. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#11
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I generally recommend all power amps (excepting HdPhone amps) be on
thier own breaker (of the studio leg) as well. Is this not typical? Thanks, DM "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles wrote: I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It's not really necessary, but it makes things a lot easier. And in a typical commercial facility, you'll find also that the studio electronics are actually a fairly small part of the total load. The air conditioning system usually dwarfs the actual electronics load. It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. It is totally unnecessary with properly grounded equipment. The chances that everything in a given studio will be properly grounded is pretty close to zero. It helps to carefully design a signal grounding system, but some gear will still need modification to get rid of pin 1 stupidity on the part of the manufacturer. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#12
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On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 15:39:02 GMT, "U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles" "Charles
wrote: I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. This is the US system, where everyone gets 240 volts but for many purposes only uses half of it? Do you also have the option of a multi-phase 240v supply, where greater power is required? This is "in the street" in most UK areas, but normally only wired into industrial premises. Domestic users get one phase only. CubaseFAQ www.laurencepayne.co.uk/CubaseFAQ.htm "Possibly the world's least impressive web site": George Perfect |
#13
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On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 15:39:02 GMT, "U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles" "Charles
wrote: I'm in the midst of getting my room wired. I've read that "everything in the studio should be on the same electrical leg." Welp, if you're a commercial facility, you pay not only for the power you consume, but ALSO for your power factor and for phase imbalances, both of which cost the power company extra money. So do commercial facilities really wire all their audio on one electrical leg? Do they break it out by rooms to maintain phase balance? Is this really necessary? It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. This is the US system, where everyone gets 240 volts but for many purposes only uses half of it? Do you also have the option of a multi-phase 240v supply, where greater power is required? This is "in the street" in most UK areas, but normally only wired into industrial premises. Domestic users get one phase only. CubaseFAQ www.laurencepayne.co.uk/CubaseFAQ.htm "Possibly the world's least impressive web site": George Perfect |
#14
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On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 19:26:07 +0100, Laurence Payne
wrote: On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 15:39:02 GMT, "U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles" "Charles wrote: It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. This is the US system, where everyone gets 240 volts but for many purposes only uses half of it? Do you also have the option of a multi-phase 240v supply, where greater power is required? This is "in the street" in most UK areas, but normally only wired into industrial premises. Domestic users get one phase only. Not on my street, no. Think I can convince my wife to move a couple blocks? |
#15
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On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 19:26:07 +0100, Laurence Payne
wrote: On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 15:39:02 GMT, "U-CDK_CHARLES\\Charles" "Charles wrote: It'd be simple to wire my room "on one leg" but I'm wondering whether or not it's truly necessary with properly grounded equipment. This is the US system, where everyone gets 240 volts but for many purposes only uses half of it? Do you also have the option of a multi-phase 240v supply, where greater power is required? This is "in the street" in most UK areas, but normally only wired into industrial premises. Domestic users get one phase only. Not on my street, no. Think I can convince my wife to move a couple blocks? |
#16
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This is the US system, where everyone gets 240 volts but for many
purposes only uses half of it? you get 240 on two wires with a neutral (tied to earth). the two 240 wires are balanced -- 180degs out, or opposite polarity, and each wire to neutral is 120v. in a typical breaker box, every other breaker is on the same phase, or leg. this means that a 240v breaker takes two spaces, and 3-wire circuits (where two circuits share the same neutral wire) are on adjacent breakers so each circuit is on opposing legs as well. never quite understood 3-phase. always wondered if that meant each line was 120degs out from the other. used mainly for industrial motors, so i always guessed it made sense for induction motors where the rotor had three coils or something something. . . won't mess with that until that 3-phase capstan motor arrives for the tape deck . . . cheers, chris deckard saintlouis mo Do you also have the option of a multi-phase 240v supply, where greater power is required? This is "in the street" in most UK areas, but normally only wired into industrial premises. Domestic users get one phase only. CubaseFAQ www.laurencepayne.co.uk/CubaseFAQ.htm "Possibly the world's least impressive web site": George Perfect |
#17
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This is the US system, where everyone gets 240 volts but for many
purposes only uses half of it? you get 240 on two wires with a neutral (tied to earth). the two 240 wires are balanced -- 180degs out, or opposite polarity, and each wire to neutral is 120v. in a typical breaker box, every other breaker is on the same phase, or leg. this means that a 240v breaker takes two spaces, and 3-wire circuits (where two circuits share the same neutral wire) are on adjacent breakers so each circuit is on opposing legs as well. never quite understood 3-phase. always wondered if that meant each line was 120degs out from the other. used mainly for industrial motors, so i always guessed it made sense for induction motors where the rotor had three coils or something something. . . won't mess with that until that 3-phase capstan motor arrives for the tape deck . . . cheers, chris deckard saintlouis mo Do you also have the option of a multi-phase 240v supply, where greater power is required? This is "in the street" in most UK areas, but normally only wired into industrial premises. Domestic users get one phase only. CubaseFAQ www.laurencepayne.co.uk/CubaseFAQ.htm "Possibly the world's least impressive web site": George Perfect |
#18
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mr c deckard wrote:
never quite understood 3-phase. always wondered if that meant each line was 120degs out from the other. used mainly for industrial motors, so i always guessed it made sense for induction motors where the rotor had three coils or something something. . . Bingo. It's a good thing for a number of reasons, most notably easier motor starting. But you can get 3-phase power and break it down into three 120V legs if you need 120V power. won't mess with that until that 3-phase capstan motor arrives for the tape deck . . . The Uher 4000 actually has a 3-phase capstan motor driven by an oscillator with two low-pass filters that act as phase shift networks to give you nice stable three-phase from a reference that stays accurate as the line voltage from the battery changes (for the most part). Some of the Nagra machines used six-phase motors, even. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#19
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mr c deckard wrote:
never quite understood 3-phase. always wondered if that meant each line was 120degs out from the other. used mainly for industrial motors, so i always guessed it made sense for induction motors where the rotor had three coils or something something. . . Bingo. It's a good thing for a number of reasons, most notably easier motor starting. But you can get 3-phase power and break it down into three 120V legs if you need 120V power. won't mess with that until that 3-phase capstan motor arrives for the tape deck . . . The Uher 4000 actually has a 3-phase capstan motor driven by an oscillator with two low-pass filters that act as phase shift networks to give you nice stable three-phase from a reference that stays accurate as the line voltage from the battery changes (for the most part). Some of the Nagra machines used six-phase motors, even. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#20
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On or about 13 Jul 2004 19:52:02 -0400, Scott Dorsey allegedly wrote:
mr c deckard wrote: never quite understood 3-phase. always wondered if that meant each line was 120degs out from the other. used mainly for industrial motors, so i always guessed it made sense for induction motors where the rotor had three coils or something something. . . Bingo. It's a good thing for a number of reasons, most notably easier motor starting. And reversing. Swap two phases, and the motor goes the other way. With 240V on each leg, the peak across two legs is 2*Sin(60)x240V or 415Volts, which is what 3 phase power is commonly called here. Noel Bachelor noelbachelorAT(From:_domain) Language Recordings Inc (Darwin Australia) |
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