Adventures with Clock Cables


My Aurender N20 has a Word Clock BNC input and my MSB Discrete DAC has a Word Clock BNC output. Vince at MSB recommended that I connect these devices with a 75 ohm clock cable. This allows the MSB Clock to be the master and the Aurender Clock the slave. There is a selection within the Aurender Conductor app that allows you to select this synchrony.

Last year I tried this connection using a $35 75 ohm BNC cable from Blue Jeans and the result was easily heard. Smoother presentation and better soundstage. Two months ago I thought I would see what additional improvements I could get by upgrading the clock cable. I called The Cable Company, where I borrow all my cables, and spoke to Ethan who is quite knowledgeable. I was going to demo the Shunyata Theta cable but it was on loan. Ethen suggested I try the Alpha which was a lot more than the Theta but I figured at least let me see what this does. I was skeptical that any significant improvement would be worth the cost.

A day or two later the cable arrived and after swapping out the Blue Jeans I was shocked to hear a significant improvement specifically in soundstage transparency and overall refinement. Now I was curious at least to see what the Sigma and Omega versions would do.. These were a lot more than I wanted to spend but I decided to try them. After evaluating all three over a week I can say I preferred the Alpha. The Sigma and Omega I felt at least for my system had too much noise reduction that slightly damped the highs. So I ordered the Alpha. Once hearing it I could not go back to the Blue Jeans.

About two weeks later I received the new cable from Shunyata. The cable that I borrowed and still in my system was the previous version before the new X Series was introduced. So the new cable I got was a Alpha-X. To my delight this cable sounded even better than the one I borrowed. All of the characteristics of the original Alpha were subtly but noticeably enhanced. In other words it was even better.

Amazing to me this improved my system to this degree as the clock cable does not transmit any sound or audio information. Just timing. But apparently there is noise that rides along and adds jitter to the clock signal causing artifacts that are audible.

Anyway if you have an external clock call The Cable Company and borrow a few Shunyata clock cables and see for yourself what improvement you can net.

jfrmusic

@jfrmusic,

 

Where there in any and in the most obvious differences/ways in sound and presentation did the Omega clock, you felt was in any way better or worst in your system context over your Alpha X as i already have context of sound with the Sigma v2.

 

I am just wondering in order to decide if i should just order the Alpha X or wait quite some time for any possibility for trying them, if and when the stocks are in. This might be a towards end of the year or even early next year!

 

Hope you are able to help further.

 

Thanks

@justubes2 

As I mentioned, in my system it was clear that the Alpha better than the Omega. The Omega for me was too controlled with a loss of some high frequency air. And the Alpha X was even better than the previous Alpha version. 
 

You can borrow the previous version Alpha from The Cable Company. That’s what I did. You will be impressed with that one. The X is even better. They may have the Alpha X now.  When I purchased the Alpha X from Shunyata I received it from Shunyata in about 2 weeks. 

"The Omega for me was too controlled with a loss of some high frequency air” 

-blind test results? 

No I trust my ears. After a week of comparing the Omega, Sigma and Alpha cables I preferred the Alpha in my system. I have 25 reference tracks I know intimately that I’ve used for a few years to evaluate equipment. With those I can tell within a few minutes if the cable is adding or subtracting from what I like. Now in another system the result may be different. But it was clear to me. No question.