The Oracle Z-Cord Reference FP
features the same proprietary hard
wound cable as the Oracle Z-Cord
Reference and includes 7 Filterpoles.
The unique winding topology combined
with the highest quality silver-clad
conductors and the finest
dielectrics, and adds MIT's patented
Filterpole technology and housing it
in the same billet aluminum
enclosures as the Oracle
interconnects protecting the passive
parallel networks from sympathetic
vibrations, resulting in an AC power
cable that exhibits an extremely low
noise floor and reduces dielectric
distortions to well below the
audible level. The benefits of this
intense attention to detail are
greatly improved dynamic contrasts,
improved low level detail, and
proper image localization and
stability.
Powerline noise can be introduced to
your system either directly from
your appliances and tools for
example, or indirectly, when the
line itself acts as an antenna to
inject external radio frequency and
electromagnetic interference. Today,
more sources of noise exist because
of all the digital equipment in our
homes and offices.
Powerline noise affects both our
audio and video signals, as well as
slowing down the digital data
streams on our networks. Audio can
be affected by distortions
introduced in contaminated equipment,
and can manifest itself as subtle
grainy distortions, compressed
imaging, and unnatural or harsh
timbre.
Similarly, video picture quality
will suffer in the form of slight
graininess or snow, especially in
darker pictures. The level of
contrast and depth of field are
affected, as is the natural detail
that comes from accurately passing
very high frequencies. In extreme
conditions, line noise can create
visible hum bars and color shifts.
MIT’s Z-Series power filtration
products feature our patented
parallel AC Filterpoles, which
includes specially-tuned networks
for eliminating reflected noise and
converting it to harmless thermal
heat, discharging it to ground. This
is done by creating a very low
impedance across the load at a
variety of frequencies corresponding
to sources of unwanted noise. |