0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 13352 times.
...I wonder if companies that claim to cryo tubes actually do anything. Maybe they just re-pack the tubes and ship them back to you. How would anyone know if they did or not?...--Ethan
http://youtu.be/z3uqjuOg8xwConsider this a warning
a null result is not confirmation or repudiation, it's a null result, it means you didn't find anything. A null result can only suggest, not confirm.
It sure looks like you are suggesting that the guys that do cryo are charlatans, liars, and thieves.
What about you guys that sell room treatments? Few if any actually measure and do the math to make sure that the diffusers you sell are something other than some random cuts on your table saw? Are your absorption panels nothing better than lightweight foam?
I remember reading that you use a stereo receiver to power your rig; what else do you do your evaluations with?
Actually, before a null test will show anything, one has to be performed on something that has cryo treated.On another note, here is my waterfall plot with two Aux subs operating out of phase. My waterfall shows a worst case 30db of decay in 300ms at about 32Hz.No room treatment other than subs operating out of phase with front mains.Scotty
I'll try to explain the graph I put up. In the simplest terms a waterfall plot is a way of seeing an echo and how long the echo takes to die out. In the graph I posted the amount of time we are looking at is 300 milliseconds and the dB range covered by the signal is from a peak level of about 62db at the top of the mountain range to 15dB at the bottom for a total dB range of about 45dB. In some cases the signal decays right into the floor well inside the 300ms time window. I can make this graph look better by showing you less of it, say only the first 20db of decay, this is done by raising the floor and covering up what is happening to the decay below the that level. You can also apply smoothing to the graph which is like putting joint compound in the cracks so they don't show up in the graph. I think a waterfall graph is one of the easiest to use to misrepresent what is happening when a driver or room is measured. It is possible to manipulate it to the point that it shows no pertinent information at all.Here is the same information that is shown is the first graph with only the first 20dB of decay shown, no smoothing and no other manipulation of data. Scotty
I fail to see how waterfall plots relate to cryo?Stay in topic and no "you do x so you can't talk about y". It's a poor argument.
what does the ideal waterfall graph like this look like?
Uniform decay times across all frequencies?
Just got back some cryo'ed tubes. This is my first foray into cryoing, and I am typically a skeptic until I hear otherwise, but am willing to try, test and learn. They are burning in now and I should have something to say about them vs the same tube non-cryoed shortly.
I wonder if companies that claim to cryo tubes actually do anything. Maybe they just re-pack the tubes and ship them back to you.
I don't think this helps your status as an "audio expert".