Tengo para ustedes tres contactos de PS Audio Power Port Classic, estan en caja y todo solo que el preducto se sacó para ser mostrado y por ello caen en la categoría de "caja abierta", sin embargo nunca han sido usados y se entregan en su empaque original incluso. Una ganga así no siempre la hay. No solo mejoran audio, también video.
El precio regular es de $ 650 Pesos ( 50 USD @ USA + tax + envío ), sin embargo
considerando lo ya expuesto, el precio por cada uno lo ubicaré en -30%, es decir $ 455 Pesos y además
¡ Envío incluido si están en el DF !
¡ Tengo 3 unidades Power Port Classic !
Power PortT
http://www.psaudio.com/products/powerport_overview.asp
a.. 15 coats polished nickel
b.. Classic and Designer models
c.. Hospital grade
d.. 15 or 20 amp ready
e.. Improves images
f.. Lowers noise
g.. Easy to install
a.. Cleans the soundstage
b.. Open, airy, top end
c.. Improves midrange bloom
d.. Will not degrade over time
e.. Improved connectivity
f.. Lowers apparent noise floor
g.. AV GradeT
Si alguien cree que es solo un producto suntuoso por favor que lea el siguiente texto, a quien le guste la calidad y la confiabilidad a prueba del tiempo este producto es el indicado con sus 15 capas de niquelado. No hay engaño es un producto de alta calidad, maquilado bajo especificación y materiales específicos por Hubbell para PS Audio.
http://www.stereophile.com/artdudleylistening/1103listening/
The first Power Port I installed got the dual chores of supplying AC to my CD player and my Naim NAP110 power amp, which means it also powered my Naim 32.5 preamp, since the latter gets its DC from the former. The first disc I tried was the reissue of George Harrison's beautiful All Things Must Pass album, in particular "I Live for You." That one begins with a few notes on a pedal steel guitar-a nice test, as it turns out, because those notes sounded stronger, fuller, cleaner, and altogether more "solid" with the new outlets in place.
Is there enough of a performance difference to justify the trouble and expense? All things considered, yes: I heard the Power Port make a small, subtle, yet very real improvement in sonic performance. The difference was consistently audible with a wide variety of products, and I'm hard-pressed to think of another way to improve a hi-fi system for just $50.
That's a sales technique the "high-end" audio community uses a lot these days: playing off the consumer's sense of fiscal imbalance. Why use cheap speaker wires to connect your expensive speakers? Why use a cheap AC cord on your expensive amplifier? Why put your expensive audio equipment in a room made out of cheap lumber and nails? (I can see it now: "Replace the nails in your listening room with our scientifically designed, nonmagnetic WonderNails®!") Why wear cheap underpants when you're listening to expensive records on an expensive turntable?
I'm immune to such things, of course (haw), and the reason I have a pair of PS Audio Power Ports on hand is because someone gave them to me, which is the same thing as giving me a column, which is the same thing as giving me this month's paycheck. I wanted to earn my keep and give them a fair try (footnote 1).
The Power Port Classic is outwardly similar to the duplex AC outlets in most American homes, with two sockets that protrude from the receptacle box, giving a flush-mount look when the usual plastic cover is screwed into place. Its enclosure is made of fiber-reinforced thermoplastic, the face is thermoplastic polyester, and the back-frame and mounting screws are stainless steel. All of the Power Port's terminal screws are silicon bronze, and its internal contacts are "high-purity" brass plated with 15 coats of polished nickel.