Hi Steve,
I've just spent some time looking at the Synergistic and Tara websites tying to understand biased interconnect implementations. Its not something I've followed, and my exposure has been limited to an early 90s article in HiFi World where the bias was applied to the signal leg and then removed via caps."
Hi Occam. I have limited exposure as well. I wonder if the additional caps may do more sonic harm because of the added caps than good that biasing might provide. I guess that is why we experiment though.
As a method of actually testing biased interconnects, using the offset of the preamp should be straightforward. My own CF output preamp has about +60vdc on its output prior to the coupling cap."
Although dangerous, yes, "removing" the output coupling cap and introducing the cap at the input of the amplifier would provide bias for the IC and the voltage would certainly be quite high.
(For the newbies reading this, I would be very careful cause 60 volts can kill!)
I read the url you provided, but am unsure as to what voltage is appropriate for such a biasing experiment. Suggestions? Explanations?"
I am not an expert in chemistry, but these two comments are interesting.
"When a capacitor is discharged across a load the polarized dipoles thermally relax in a statistical manner, exhibiting a time decay, observed as a tailing decay of residual current as complete discharge is approached."
"can orient electronically, with less mechanical change in the polymer structure."
I do not know if biasing helps enough to notice a sonic difference, but if it does, 60 volts sounds plenty high to begin with. Below that, I would only be guessing where the point of diminishing returns would be. Maybe 3 or 4 times the highest maximum signal voltage??
I think that since nothing is perfect, i.e. there are problems with inductors (none linear losses indicated by the hysteresis loop), that similar losses and distortions might occur with capacitors and dielectric materials in ICs. Especially as the caps swings through 0?? Good luck on the experiment.