Moving cables around killed dynamics for days anyone else experience this?


I've been experimenting with different cables between components. Nothing sounds right since trying to improve sound with new mix of cables. There is no bass and boring, highs are okay but life is gone from system. So I flipped everything back the way it was still sound horrible. Ran everything 24/7 for a couple days still no go. Let it run a couple more days dynamics are back and bass is full big and has tone again and enjoyable to listen to. Can someone tell me why this happens. I've also moved just speaker cables around without unhooking them and seen this happen, I don't get it.
paulcreed
I sent this thread to a Fellow Guru of High Audionic Praise...
and the following reply (of great clarity) was returned:
It’s the disturbance of the aether that takes awhile to settle back. Many people also don’t realize the gravimetric affects of slinging their cables about willy nilly. With regard to graviton displacement and the attendant (who shall remain nameless) subatomic particle spin state changes which can easily be measured with a bowl of dried cereal and two sparrow feathers placed at right angular momentum assuming (and this is key) a 10 dB drop across all barometric frequencies, one can simply subtract the total amount of capacitive reactance of all unconnected cables laying around within 1 meter per watt times pi minus the degrees, minutes and seconds in latitude below the 33rd parallel. Then place a hygrometer no further than 20 cm from the dried cereal, carefully multiplying the percentage in hygrometric changes converted to picofarads per graviton/hour.

This will yield a result in the number of hours required for the aether to return to the previous undisturbed state - Those is in the southern hemisphere need only invert the equation where applicable.

This has been tested and verified 29 times.  So far.


Indeed. Perhaps a petition to the post production sound industry from audiophiles, as to how the pros ought to dress their cables, is the fix!


Recently ran into a rather interesting article....( which btw pivots on a notion put forth by Robert Ludwig way back at the dawn of The Great Digital Delightenment...)

https://www.dagogo.com/records-sound-better/
Wherein I found the following....maybe not definitive proof of anything but interesting none-the-less ( and kinda pertinent..) ...

Manufacturers in the Hi-Fi world were trying to figure out how to make those shiny discs sound good, or at least better. I credit all the developments in converter design in the Hi-Fi world for causing improvements to digital recording in the pro audio world.


Read, so maybe it would be a good idea for lowly audiophiles to bring some small level of improvement to the exalted world of pro sound ...sorta like bringing a higher grade of acoustics to sound stages which are generally tuned by some variation of hanging blacks...and after-all the audiophile perspective did inform Ludwig's work which was definitely not a catalog of sausage factory product...

As Bob Dylan said when a disgruntled fan pointed out how crappy some of his more recent albums sounded, especially with respect to dynamic range but also generally speaking, “It sounded good when we recorded it.” Therein lies the rub, you can’t get there from here. It’s the playback system, stupid! Hint - it ain’t the converters.
Yes I agree with  @dmac's friend.
But, I am surprised by people who refuse to hear a change in sound (caused by some change in system) just because they don’t know how to explain this change scientifically.
I think probably everything has to have scientifically explanation, but nobody from us has a full knowledge about the wold around us.