Van Den Hul Polarity Checker
helps to enhance your audio
system’s resolution
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Description:
The van den Hul POLARITY CHECKER is a unique
device that will come in handy in fine-tuning your audio installation to enhance
its resolving capabilities by minimizing its residual ground currents;
However, it also serves as a voltage, phase and cable-interruption checker with
all kinds of electrical appliances in and around the house:
- Works without a battery, thus is always
ready for use !
- Its liquid crystal display safely senses and
indicates the voltage relative to your body (=ground), that is present at any
object touched with its screwdriver blade.
- It measures 12V to 230V, AC and DC in 12,
36, 55, 110 and 220V indication steps and also can indicate the presence of
electric stray fields.
- Very sensitive and safe: Its leakage current
is less than 3µA.
- The van den Hul POLARITY CHECKER is supplied
with clear operating instructions describing the residual ground current
minimisation procedure.
- Do not use with AC or DC voltages exceeding
250 Volts !
About residual ground currents
flowing in your audio installation:
Due to the fact that most audio equipment in
your installation is powered by the mains voltage, an unavoidable hum voltage
residual is induced on all cabinets and audio grounds. At all audio devices
these residual voltages are of different magnitude (or phase) and will balance
out by means of ground currents flowing through the shields of your
interconnecting cables.
Generally, these ground currents are in the same order of magnitude as the audio
signal currents being transferred (microAmperes), and thus are likely to
interfere, thereby reducing transparency and imaging.
With the van den Hul POLARITY CHECKER, you can simply fine-tune your audio
system to eliminate, or at least strongly reduce, these residual ground currents
and thus improve your system’s performance.
Operating Instructions:
The van den Hul voltage tester is a unique
device that will come in handy in fine-tuning your audio installation to
minimise its residual ground currents; However, it is also serves as a voltage,
phase and cable-interruption checker with all kinds of electrical appliances in
and around the house:
- Works without a battery, thus is always
ready for use !
- Its liquid crystal display safely senses and
indicates the voltage relative to your body (=ground), that is present at any
object touched with its screwdriver blade.
- It measures 12V to 230V, AC and DC in 12,
36, 55, 110 and 220V indication steps and also can indicate the presence of
electric fields.
- Very sensitive and safe: Its leakage current
is less than 3 µA.
- Do not use with AC or DC voltages exceeding
250 Volts !
- The van den Hul voltage tester is equipped
with two measurement modes

- Direct test mode = Voltage measurement:
When touching the 'Direct Test' button and pressing its screwdriver blade to
any metal part under test, the highest figure that lights up on the display
indicates the voltage present. A somewhat more precise voltage reading can be
obtained by considering the intensity of the highest voltage displayed.
Looking at the display from a different angle may help here.
- Inductance / Break-point Test mode =
Electric field indication:
Press the 'Inductance / Break-point Test' button and point the screwdriver
blade towards the object under test, not necessarily touching it with the
blade. Here, the display's "spark" symbol (intensity) indicates the presence
of electric fields that are radiated from appliances and cabling. This
function is useful to trace voltage carrying cabling, cable interruptions,
electric fields and static electricity.
About residual ground currents flowing in your
installation:
Due to the fact that most audio equipment in your installation is powered by the
mains voltage, an unavoidable hum voltage residual is induced on all cabinets
and audio grounds. At all audio devices these residual voltages are of different
magnitude (or phase) and will balance out by means of ground currents flowing
through the shields of your interconnecting cables. Generally, these ground
currents are in the same order of magnitude as the audio signal currents being
transferred (microAmperes), and thus are likely to interfere, thereby reducing
transparency and imaging. With the van den Hul voltage tester, you can simply
fine-tune your audio system to eliminate, or at least strongly reduce, these
residual ground currents and thus improve your system's performance.
Fine-tuning your audio system using the van den
Hul voltage tester:
Note: To perform the fine-tuning correctly and without problems in a single
pass, the reader is strongly advised to be fully acquainted with the parts below
(points 1 trough 4 and "Hints") before applying the optimisation procedure to an
audio installation.
The optimisation procedure:
- First, each audio device in your
installation needs to be made completely electrically isolated from its
environment; Remove (disconnect) all interconnect and other cabling from the
equipment in your installation (even your tuner's antenna and loudspeaker
cables) and unplug all mains plugs. Also make sure that no other possible
current paths between your equipment or to ground remain (for instance
occurring along metal housings directly contacting each other or along metal
supports). Further, make sure to turn down all your volume controls.
- With the tester (pressing the 'Direct Test'
button), find the phase (=hot) on all mains outlets that power your audio
equipment and mark it.
- With each audio device in your installation
to be optimised now repeat the following steps (A through C):
Note: When testing any audio device, all other equipment in your installation
must be kept unplugged from mains.
- Plug into mains, switch ON and use the
tester's 'Direct Test' button to measure the residual voltage present on the
local audio ground, with its screwdriver blade pressed against any of the
device's line level input's or output's (RCA/Cinch) outer metal shield
connection (=audio ground). (For instance measure at your CD player's right
or left channel's output shield).
- Switch OFF, reverse the device's mains
plug polarity by turning the plug 180 degrees, plug in and switch ON. Now
again measure the residual voltage as described at point A.
- The mains plug polarity position producing
the lowest residual voltage minimises the device's residual ground currents.
Switch OFF, and unplug the mains connection. Mark the plug's side that was
connected to the mains outlet's phase (already marked at point 2) in the
optimum position found. With both your mains plugs and outlets marked, the
optimum plug polarity always easily can be retrieved. Continue at point A
with the following audio device until all the equipment in your installation
has been optimised for minimal residual voltages.
- Having completed point 3, reconnect all
wiring while routing your mains cables as far away as possible from the
interconnects, loudspeaker cables and all audio device's cabinets. This to
keep the mains cables' electrical stray fields from inducing additional hum
voltages. Residual ground currents now have been minimised and your
installation should sound cleaner. Also, if present at all, audible mains
related disturbances such as clicks and so on will be reduced.
Some hints:
- In some countries, mains plugs equipped with
a ground pole can not be reversed. In most cases the related audio equipment
will thus be grounded to mains, and does not need to be optimised for polarity.
With mains grounded equipment the tester will indicate a zero voltage residual
on the audio ground.
- To get the most accurate and objective
reading of the residual voltage present on any device, please note the
following:
- When measuring, touch the device under
test only with the voltage tester. Also do not touch any other electrical
appliances with your body.
- Route the mains cables from each device
under test as straight away as possible from the device itself to reduce the
cables' electrical stray field influence on the measurement; The mains cable
stray fields unwantedly increase the device's residual voltage.
- Considering the intensity of the highest
voltage indicated on the tester's display helps you to get more precise
voltage readings; Looking at the tester's display from a different angle may
help here. (Always use the same angle to be more accurate when comparing
residual voltages in different mains plug polarity positions).
- When, despite having taken the hints above
into account, no different voltage readings between both mains plug polarities
can be obtained:
- Remove the device from the vicinity of
other electrical appliances and cabling, or at least disconnect those from
the mains.
- Improve your body's grounding by touching
either central heating, water tap, mains ground (or even a wall or the floor)
with your other hand; This however will only rarely be necessary.
- When getting no voltage reading at all, the
device under test must be having a contact to ground. When this is due to
connection to a grounded outlet you do not need to optimise this device, since
all its residual currents will be drained to ground anyhow. When the device is
not grounded to mains, check whether the device has contact to ground in
another way (for instance occurring along metal housings directly contacting
each other or along metal supports); Try to remove this parasitic ground
contact.
- In some cases in the optimal mains plug
position the minimal residual voltage remains as high as halve your mains
voltage or higher; Directly touching these devices may be dangerous (risk of
shock) as there is a high leakage from the mains; The device probably has been
designed to need connection to a mains outlet equipped with a ground contact,
which then you MUST provide. If it does not have a mains plug with a ground
contact, running a wire from one of its cabinet's screws to mains ground,
central heating or water tap (always first unplug the device from mains) may
solve the problem. Verify with the voltage tester.
Note: When connecting more than one audio
device to ground in your installation, risk of introducing ground loops exists.
When all actions mentioned
above are performed properly and according to their description, safety risks
are kept to a minimum. Audiokit & Van den Hul B.V. however denies liability for
damage or harm of any direct or indirect nature resulting from, or occurring
through, activities triggered by this manual; Always think twice and be very
careful when working with the mains voltage! Always use the voltage tester in
direct test mode to check whether dangerous voltages are present.
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e prodotti aggiornati sul nuovo sito Audiokit e-Shop cliccando qui !
Update prices & products on new e-Shop
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mercoledì 02 luglio 2014
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