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Yeah, but they really don't need to. Subjective evaluation is (by definition) incontrovertible and leaves no basis for discussion. It really is the easy way out. The premise that ferrites are evil and should "be gone" is just silly rhetoric.The Lab Circle should probably be off limits to this kind of subjective evaluation nonsense, but, I guess not.Dave.
It's all about reducing interference and noise, that's called Good Engineering Practice.You are on your own deciding whether reducing interference and noise is a good thing.Wait a minute, sometimes audiophiles think that a lomponent. ittle bit of background noise is added definition.
Just because you placed them where you *think* they're supposed to go doesn't mean that they will work. Ferrites actually require a vast amount of knowledge (more than I have) on where and how to use them. Like everything there is some science involved but that is overlooked very often in audio.
Good engineering practice is key in designing a good sounding component. Reducing noise and interference is always a good thing no arguement there. At the end of the day when everything is engineered and built does one just put it in a box and send it off ? I would hope that the component is evaluated for its sonic outcome. Halcro anybody ? Measured like nothing before but sounded just horrible. Yes my hearing is subjective. That is the point. Consumers buy product that sounds good, We hope good engineering practice is used in the design however my money goes to what sounds good to me. My money my decision. When someone tells me I'm not hearing what I'm hearing it just turns me off and a sale is not made. For you lab guys it is all about engineering and measuring. Great we need that. What we do not need are shut eyes. We respect your science so please respect our trained ears.charles
Yes, it's super easy, they clip on and off.Not everyone has laboratory equipment. The circle uses a moniker, btw. Construction and DIY are in the headline.
Yeah, that's what I thought. (Not all of them do BTW.) The ones that aren't easily removed/re-installed should be just left in place? That evil we have to put up with?Construction and DIY are outside the bounds of laboratory equipment?Anyways, as already mentioned by sts9fan, your initial post should probably not have been in this Circle.Sorry for the pesky comments but you guys bring this stuff on yourself.But that's it, I'll leave you to it. Cheers,Dave.
What circle are you suggesting?
The guys at Ayre have mentioned previously their experiences using ferrites for power supply wiring feeding audio circuitry. They experienced that at first the ferrites work as expected, lowering the noise level. But then, the sound gets hard over time (glassiness). they found that if one then de-gaussed the ferrites, the sound would go back to normal. So they figured the ferrites were developing a magnetic field over time which changed their properties, and that periodic de-gaussing was the only way to restore them to good sound. Just something to think about.