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The most important source of one’s music system lurks behind the facings and controls of the audio equipment. Take a moment to stand back and look deep within and far behind those components. The source you’re looking for is not your CD transport + D/A converter or CDP. It’s not the turntable or its cartridge; it’s not the tuner, or the preamp. Look farther, deeper, back through the tangle of power cords, interconnects, and speaker wire. The source you’re looking for begins at the AC wall socket and beyond. The quality, structure, and efficiency of the AC entering your music system play a profound role in the musicality and dimensionality of the music your system can reproduce.

The power supplies within your audio components simply do not have the ability to clear the incoming AC of all radio frequency interference (RFI), digital noise, and electro-magnetic interference (EMI), and other electrical disturbances that household AC brings when it enters your home. It’s simply not their job. This is the job of the AC line conditioner.

Our lead designer Ted Denney’s frustration with the current state of conventional AC power conditioning led to the development of the PowerCell. His listening tests confirmed at best most line conditioners to date smooth out undesirable aspects of AC contamination, offering a somewhat more pleasant overall sound, but at the expense of lost detail, air, and low frequency impact and control. At worst, they tend to compress spatial information and can even degrade high frequency air and transparency, especially as current demand increases.

Ted began work on a completely new concept in line conditioning by passing AC through an electromagnetic cell. This new patented technology works outside of the signal path to condition alternating current with differential EM fields. Most line conditioners work by placing transformers or chokes in the signal path, which create additional problems. These filtering methods act to slow transient response while limiting current resulting in a muddying of low frequencies. That’s why it’s usually not a good idea to plug a power amplifier directly into a line conditioner.

By contrast, plugging an amplifier into the Synergistic Research PowerCell actually improves your systems low frequency impact, control, and extension. It significantly increases overall soundstage width and height, while dramatically improving front to back layering and air. Midrange texture becomes richer and high frequencies become more extended and transparent while the overall sound is sweeter and more musical. Video monitors and projectors portray images with greater color saturation, less noise, with fewer motion artifacts and a sharper more three dimensional appearance.

The Synergistic Research PowerCell is noncurrent limiting. The only limitation being the amount of current provided by your power company. In fact, the more components you plug into a PowerCell, the more efficient its internal electromagnetic filter becomes, resulting in increased performance.

When we built the first PowerCell, Ted was eager to test his concept for the world’s first electromagnetic cell to condition AC. He did not want to wait for a metal chassis to be built ,so we used wood to fabricate the first prototype, which was completed late that evening. When we plugged our system into the prototype, the sound was flat and dark ,with a noticeable loss of air. Tired and disappointed, Ted left the factory late that evening to contemplate this surprise failure. He had hoped for his first good night’s sleep since becoming obsessed with the development of the PowerCell.

“The Synergistic Research PowerCell is noncurrent limiting.”

Ted awoke early the following morning to the sound of Eliott’s voice on the telephone. “Ted you need to get in here- now.” When he got to the factory the system had transformed, or more to the point, the PowerCell was breaking in, and the dark closed in sound of the night before was replaced by an open transparency he had not heard before. For the next few days, the system continued to improve with holographic realism, low frequency impact, and high frequency air, better than anything he had yet achieved in his reference system.

Over the next several days, Ted envisioned two evolutions in the PowerCell’s circuitry, so we built two new variations of the original prototype; each better than the last. The first added a filter plate for the return AC, while the second included this innovation plus a filter plate for ground. It was this third generation circuit that had by far the best sound.

We were now only a few weeks out from the ’07 RMAF in Denver, and Ted wanted to take his prototype to the show, so we began fabricating a third generation PowerCell in an aluminum chassis. With only one day to spare, we listened to the final PowerCell, now clad in aluminum. Much to our surprise, the new metal chassis sucked most of the life from the PowerCell. When we compared it to its wooden brother, no doubt about it, the wooden chassis significantly outperformed the PowerCell with an aluminum chassis. Hoping that the metal PowerCell would open up just as the original PowerCell had done, we brought both variations to the show. Sadly this was not to be the case, and the PowerCell made its debut under a blanket in order to hide its modest plywood shell. Fortunately, most show goers were so excited about the PowerCell’s performance, that few asked what was under the blanket.

When we got back from the show, Ted knew he had a product people wanted to buy, but had no idea of how we was going to build it. Totally out of the question was a wooden chassis, as was the much compromised metal version, with comparatively weak bass performance and higher noise floor. Thus began a long search for a suitable material that would allow Ted’s electromagnetic filter technology to perform to its full potential. With more time to study the performance differences between metal vs. wood, we found that wood outperformed metal whether or not the PowerCell was switched on or off. Not only was the wooden chassis “invisible” to its EM cell from an electromagnetic standpoint, it became apparent wood was doing a better job of absorbing mechanical vibration from AC. As it turned out, the metal chassis PowerCell transferred mechanical vibration to our reference systems power cords, and this created confusion and a loss of clarity in the sound of our system. Prior to this, Ted had been skeptical of the necessity for expensive carbon fiber AC faceplates that touted superior vibration isolation for improved image focus.

We were forced to find a new material that would be as invisible to the PowerCell’s internal electromagnetic filter as our plywood prototype, while offering isolation from mechanical resonance. Our search ended when we found a company in Southern California that CNC’s composite materials into medical and chemical fluid delivery systems. Unfortunately, this material was difficult to fabricate and much more expensive than a conventional steel or aluminum chassis. Development was further complicated by the need to find a coating that would maintain the material’s piano black finish, while resisting scratching. The final PowerCell is a work of groundbreaking art that combines patent pending electromagnetic filter technology with a revolutionary composite chassis that is electromagnetically inert, with three times the mechanical vibration isolation of carbon fiber.

Reviews & Press for the PowerCell:
The Absolute Sound (first look)The Absolute Sound (full review)6moons (first look) 6moons (full review)Dagogo (Jack Roberts)Dagogo (Norm Luttbeg)AudiogoN AudiogoN AudioCircle
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