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Am considering new binding posts for my 3.7 maggies. Can quality after-market binding posts improve the sound over the cheesy steel thingy that Magnepan uses.
Bad material but it shouldn't affect the sound if it's kept clean. Oxide layers or dirt, being semiconducting, will cause measurable, audible, and very unpleasant distortion.
A whole bunch of normal iron(magnetic) in jumpers, screws, and poor contacts in the signal way shouldn't affect sound, especially on the tweeter side, ? Why having this in the signal path if it is not needed and it may be audible? Cost again? Common.
the new low mass tellurium bananas will be installed directly to the xo box
Say what you want. Steel is not even used as a conductor in the house power supply, all cables are copper or aluminium, why used it then in a HIGH END speaker directly in the signal way and in the top of the line one?? Why always doing everything against knowledge and defend wrong aproach?
They're not fancy schmancy, that's what the deal is.Better looking binding posts dress the old girls up plus screwing around with stuff like this is fun.
I hope that the cables in your house electrical system aren't aluminum, or if they are, that they're properly installed, because houses with aluminum wiring have a nasty habit of burning down. And how many unplated copper contacts do you see in audio paths? None, right, that aren't plated? And yet they're used in your house electrical. These two materials have different characteristics that suit them for different applications, and if you don't know what those are, you can't make statements about a material's suitability. Steel, for example, is commonly used as a contact material where operating temperatures are high. Its conductivity is low. It must be carefully plated to prevent oxidation. But in those applications, it's the most suitable material for the job.As it happens, I didn't say I would use Magnepan's approach. I think the little setscrew and Allen wrench are a pain. I did point out that if you keep the connectors in Maggies dirt- and oxide-free and tight, you won't be able to hear the difference between them and connectors made of the most precious and non-reactive of substances. They don't have any electrical characteristics that would make them audible in those applications: their conductivity is high enough, they aren't nonlinear, so where's the beef?
Ok, I will go slowly.- most of copper contacts are like you said plated and this is ok, but there are not a lot of them made out of stell- at high temperatures we could use stell, but in the signal way to speakers? hot speakers?- you have heard what oxidized contast have done, did they went from superb sounding to crackle in one sec. ?? Or did they deteriorate with time?- what is or is not audible is not the issue, if we don't want to prevent things that are common known in the first time, we can simple say nothing matters and nothing is audible, but more "not audible" things together can be a audible effect- stell, plated or not is not a superb conductor for a speaker in the range of 10.000$ up .