A Tour-de-Force in reducing ground noise
A grounding (also called earthing) facility has always been there for the sole purpose of safety, for example shock hazard prevention, lightning protection, noise shielding and other functions.
In an audio/video setup the effectiveness of the grounding facility has an immediate impact on background noise. Bad grounding translates to poor sound quality and coloration but most of all it greatly worsens the listening experience. Our statement is: you win more by reducing ground noise than by increasing power.
Present situation
It is almost impossible to get a satisfactory grounding facility, let alone one that meets the audio/video requirements. Most of the time, they only adhere to the minimum safety requirements. The common ones have the neutral wire and the ground wire connected together, or there is no ground on the receptacles, leaving the ground wire unconnected. This allows noise from the home appliances to pollute the neutral wire, causing interference. Electrical appliances like inverter air conditioners, solar panels and those with switching power supplies, like computers, TV’s and LED lighting generate the highest level of interference.
When the electrical reference point is polluted with noise, it could get into the signal path and you could hear it as noise. Also, the noise could potentially enter the digital circuit and cause bit errors.
The pros and cons of a passive audio grade grounding box
Passive grounding boxes out there are made using materials with good conductivity like copper plates, copper rods, copper mesh, mineral powder or some composite substance. The good point about the passive, simulated ground is that it is very easy to make. In fact, most of them can be made easily by anyone having just any DIY skills.
At the same time, the properties of the minerals or electrolyte will change over time and need to be serviced on a regular basis. This includes material replacement, realignment, or replenishing of the electrolyte in order to restore effectiveness.
The challenge is that passive grounding boxes could only alleviate voltage change. They are not able to provide near ground reference voltage. Hence, it is not able to quickly stabilize the fluctuating potential difference between the A/V equipment. To use an analogy, imagine floating ships on the ocean, the sea is the ground voltage but it can never be truly stable. Telos’ active grounding solution differs since each component in the system is given a ‘reference’ ground voltage, similar to how a master clock works to reference all components to one highly accurate, stable clock.
Telos Grounding Noise Reducer “active ground box”
To overcome the above limitations, Telos brings new meaning to grounding implementation. This has been proven to be the most elegant way for any A/V setup.
Their R&D team analyzes audio equipment from a unique perspective. Every piece of A/V equipment uses a power supply in order to operate at the correct, safe DC voltage. Hence, a power supply is said to have the primary side and secondary side. The primary side is from the power receptacle, all the way to the input of the power supply. The secondary side is from the output of the power supply to the circuit board. The A/V circuitry remains within the secondary side.
The Telos technical design team proposes the use of a CPU (micro processor) within the GNR to calculate and generate a high precision ground reference voltage. Grounding is achieved by connecting the audio equipment to the binding posts of the Telos GNR that carries the ground reference voltage. By doing so, the GNR is able to truly correct the ground reference point for the equipment chassis, audio circuitry and the ground connection.
Using the same analogy as a high precision digital clock, GNR generates a low distortion ground reference voltage, giving each piece of equipment a consistent reference point. When the A/V setup is operating on a singular ground potential, the signal transmission becomes least impeded, avoiding any transmission loss due to polarity mismatch and bit error. Therefore, it truly achieves the best transmission possible.
Telos Ground Noise Reducer comes with ground wires of the same materials, thus each piece of equipment is having the same grounding impedance characteristics. This greatly reduces the likelihood of coloration. Grounding your equipment is easily done by either using an unused in- or output (RCA, XLR, USB, HDMI etc.) or a spade under a screw of the equipment housing. Telos suggests connecting as many components to the GNR as possible, and when doing so, you can connect a component more than once. They also say not to use more than two wires per post and to keep digital and analog separate – meaning you could use up to 12 wires and even more components (some of the supplied wires have a single spade at one end with double RCAs at the other). They also say one should not connect the GNR to the AC ground at any outlet nor to connect the unit to the negative terminal on an amplifier (bridge or BTL amplifiers!).
By having an isolated ground for your A/V setup, the effect is at least as good as having a dedicated power line! Because the GNR generated ground potential only serves your A/V equipment, noise of the rest of your house will be totally isolated.
Note: The GNR won’t work properly if you have a balanced electricity grid or use a balanced isolation transformer.
Reviews:
Telos Audio Design Grounding Noise Reducer (GNR) review by Dato’ Danon Han @ monoandstereo.com
Audio Ramblings – The TELOS GNR Active Grounding Box review by Dave Clark @ positive-feedback.com
YouTube:
Stillpoints and Telos Audio Design, noise reduction
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