@mijostyn
" "How can you have an opinion if you have not listened." I am really sick of that bail out. "
Well, I am really sick of being told it is all in my head. That's also a monumental bail out as well as a personal attack. I find that trope to be offensive and truly it is the crux of the entire argument. Nay-sayers cannot conduct their discussion without the need for insulting people. Indeed that is the entire point of the nay-sayer argument, is it not? Those folks are suggesting that people who buy and invest in expensive cables are "fools" and those same folks feel the need to express that.
Well, as it turns out, it is very easy to prove it isn't in anyone's head and follows electrical engineering. I mentioned this concept before in this thread. Remove your audio cable to your subwoofer (assuming it uses an RCA connection) and put in a component video cable and experience a complete loss of bass. Component cables are designed to filter out low frequency information. It's still copper, it still supports 75ohms, it has an RCA connector. It proves that cable geometry makes a definitive difference and golly gee whiz, if cable geometry can make that big a difference...then....the conclusion is better cables equal better sound.
Here's another one, if cable geometry doesn't matter, then why does HDMI require such precise wire twists and specific intervals in order to maintain speed of transmission and synchronization between audio and video? Because geometry matters. "But it's ones and zeros!" No, no it isn't. It's an analog square-wave that is interpreted as a one or zero on the receiving end. That signal is 100% impacted by electrical flaws and interference.
Also, you wouldn't connect your large speakers with 32 gauge telephone wire. At a minimum, you would connect a 12 gauge speaker wire. Why? According to you folks it shouldn't matter. Buying 12 gauge braided speaker wire is "Snake Oil." Oh wait, I forgot, if that wire is under $50 it magically becomes practical and not "Snake Oil."
Give it up. You're welcome to your opinion and in general there is nothing wrong with that. It only becomes a problem when you feel the need to pass judgement on those who don't believe as you do. Why can't you accept that some people can hear the difference? Is it because you dislike the idea that you're being left out?
" "How can you have an opinion if you have not listened." I am really sick of that bail out. "
Well, I am really sick of being told it is all in my head. That's also a monumental bail out as well as a personal attack. I find that trope to be offensive and truly it is the crux of the entire argument. Nay-sayers cannot conduct their discussion without the need for insulting people. Indeed that is the entire point of the nay-sayer argument, is it not? Those folks are suggesting that people who buy and invest in expensive cables are "fools" and those same folks feel the need to express that.
Well, as it turns out, it is very easy to prove it isn't in anyone's head and follows electrical engineering. I mentioned this concept before in this thread. Remove your audio cable to your subwoofer (assuming it uses an RCA connection) and put in a component video cable and experience a complete loss of bass. Component cables are designed to filter out low frequency information. It's still copper, it still supports 75ohms, it has an RCA connector. It proves that cable geometry makes a definitive difference and golly gee whiz, if cable geometry can make that big a difference...then....the conclusion is better cables equal better sound.
Here's another one, if cable geometry doesn't matter, then why does HDMI require such precise wire twists and specific intervals in order to maintain speed of transmission and synchronization between audio and video? Because geometry matters. "But it's ones and zeros!" No, no it isn't. It's an analog square-wave that is interpreted as a one or zero on the receiving end. That signal is 100% impacted by electrical flaws and interference.
Also, you wouldn't connect your large speakers with 32 gauge telephone wire. At a minimum, you would connect a 12 gauge speaker wire. Why? According to you folks it shouldn't matter. Buying 12 gauge braided speaker wire is "Snake Oil." Oh wait, I forgot, if that wire is under $50 it magically becomes practical and not "Snake Oil."
Give it up. You're welcome to your opinion and in general there is nothing wrong with that. It only becomes a problem when you feel the need to pass judgement on those who don't believe as you do. Why can't you accept that some people can hear the difference? Is it because you dislike the idea that you're being left out?

