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[Harmonics] Did someone tried this stuff ?

Posted: 22 Mar 2022, 11:10
by wadge
Hi,

I was looking to find answer about input lag issues on the net and i sometime find out people talking about harmonics.

I did some research and found a filter called "harmonic reactor" that help killing bad harmonics on the main.

https://french.alibaba.com/product-deta ... 43475.html

https://www.berkelektroteknik.com/engli ... actors.htm

I know those are three phases but you can use them in single phase.

So my question was, is there someone that already tried this kind of filter ?

Re: [Harmonics] Did someone tried this stuff ?

Posted: 23 Mar 2022, 09:26
by naporitan
Simply buy a "medical isolation transformer" which is the same and cheaper.

(and the problem is not harmonic distortion, but broadband interference at high frequencies.) I have a power quality analyzer and there are no excessive harmonics.

Re: [Harmonics] Did someone tried this stuff ?

Posted: 23 Mar 2022, 15:45
by wadge
naporitan wrote:
23 Mar 2022, 09:26
Simply buy a "medical isolation transformer" which is the same and cheaper.

(and the problem is not harmonic distortion, but broadband interference at high frequencies.) I have a power quality analyzer and there are no excessive harmonics.
So what would be the fix for broadband interference at high frequencies ?

But as you talk about "medical isolation transformer" there is another thread where people talk about having better input lag in hospital... maybe something is in link ?

Re: [Harmonics] Did someone tried this stuff ?

Posted: 25 Mar 2022, 03:00
by Thatweirdinputlag
Me: Intentional food poisoning to go sleep at a hospital, while dragging my 20kg setup with me lol.
naporitan wrote:
23 Mar 2022, 09:26
Simply buy a "medical isolation transformer" which is the same and cheaper.

(and the problem is not harmonic distortion, but broadband interference at high frequencies.) I have a power quality analyzer and there are no excessive harmonics.
Why do you sound so sure on this though? And by broadband do you mean the coax cable that comes along? If yes, then I'm not sure if that's the problem since I have fiber. I've actually had fiber for the last 4 years, and the coax cable that was used for the landline + Internet was removed from the panel and pulled out of its in-wall tube to make room for the fiber lines.

Please provide some sort of evidence or explanation.