mitch2: Is an ERK an Extracellular signal Regulated Kinase? If so, I whole heartedly agree. See? Aren’t I nice? And I'm dead serious about ear wax removal.
Audiophiles and Our Chase for Perfection
I'd like to solicit some thoughts and responses regarding some of our idiosyncrasies, taboo's and philosophies as audiophiles, specifically with regards to cabling.
Even if there was some magical fairy dust material that could coax protons and electrons into behaving differently or better; your signal is still going to be subject to the limitations of the “weakest component” in the signal path.
A perfect example of this is speaker cable. You can spend $50 to $100K or more on them, but as soon as they hit the next connection, junction or conductor, for example, the speaker terminal, you’ve fundamentally nullified any “perceived” benefit from those cables. Not to mention the soldering materials and their impact.
And the cycle goes on through the entirety of the circuit; including the connector/lug, back of the lug terminal, more soldering, wiring from the internal lug to the next component, to the next component and so on until you finally come to the wire or cable connecting to the driver, and even then you hit another junction at the terminal at the speaker itself as well as the subsequent wire from the terminal connecting to the voice coil, then the voice coil wire itself.
The bottom line is, there are so many contributors in the path that, unless you tear the entire speaker apart and replace them all with your idea of the “gold standard” or perfect material/component, you're still only going to be as good as the weakest component in the path. At the end of the day, just get some reasonably good 14 to 8 Gauge cables that are made of sound conducting material (e.g. 99.99% copper, or Silver if you prefer) because that same logic can be applied to ALL of the materials in the signal path.
The scenario above doesn’t even consider the influence or impact of all of the predecessor components in the signal path coming from the Amp, CD transport, DAC or any and all upstream components, as they all influence the integrity of the signal.
It should also be noted that the length the signal travels in that speaker cable (perhaps 6’ to 15’ or so) is a very short path in comparison to the rest of the system both pre and post cable connection.
The following is used with permission from Eric Alexander, Founder & Lead Designer, Tekton Design, LLC
"I truly believe audiophiles are chasing illusions, constantly attempting to fill an acoustic void that standard high-end audio simply cannot satisfy. When a flashy new component or wire comes along, the industry reacts with predictable, superficial hype. My 'In Real Life' (IRL) technology directly proves this theory—it delivers the authentic sound and visceral connection that audiophiles have been destitute and desperate for.
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I can’t say that cables as a category in general interest me but the sonic impact of the room does! Because the room skews what my gear’s capability is, I learned how to take acoustic measurements and how to decipher them. The insight led to studying small room acoustics which led to treating rooms and experimenting with different treatment types and their locations. Luckily a career in the data analytics field helped a great deal as does a musical ear and being a musician. I spend my time tweaking the largest variable amongst all sound quality factors - the room. |
@jijoh123 RE: ...
That’s not strictly true. Having the right speaker cable can improve the sound of a system immensly. Granted, the type/quality of the connector + the wire internally and the quality of the crossover does also impact the overall sound, but the wire is very important
All of these points contribute to getting the purest signal to the actual speaker.
Do that and you’ll never know just how good your various systems components really are - sorry :-( Your system will remain - "mediaocre" How do I know this? I developed my own cables over a 12 year period, from scratch using OCC silver and OCC copper with very low capacitive insulations and a cable geometry that rejects and cancels internal noise generation. I tried the cables on systems from $350 to $70,000 and the net effect was the same - i.e. significant improvements in sound quality take a look at this thread for more info I have also rewired the crossover and the wire inside the speakers - you you are correct in stating
You are correct to a certain degree - but the quality of your cables do actually impact the the performance of the connected components. So using mediocre cables will actually impact the components it connects Regards Steve |
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