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I really liked the article where a guy compared the "network" boxes between MIT and Transparent. http://cable.tcnerd.com/whymit.asp
EAD is owned by Tara labs and I have good reason to believe this company is in real trouble. I would be very cautious buying EAD equipment if warranty/long term backup is important to you.Joe M.
How many parts are involved in a typical bass treble boost\cut circuit? Surely the range of beneficial 'effect' offered by such a circuit would far exceed ANY variance possible in a 'passive' cable, right? If you want to add electrical parts to tweak the sound I'm all for it, but why not make it variable, make it obvious and put the listener in control of the effect?Just about every frequency plot you see of gear be it speakers or amps etc. has one thing in common - the bass gradually rolls off and th ...
re:http://cable.tcnerd.com/whymit.asp So Transparent are a bunch of shysters for their boxes full of inductors and resistors that'll cost you 10 grand but MIT is white as snow because they, uh, have 20 parts in their little box instead of 3 or 4 and charge the same outrageous price? That page would be cool if it was just some dude calling shenanigans, but the guy is selling cables too!
Thanks Dejan! But seriously, what do you need to boost or cut a specific frequency band? I don't know much about electronics, but I'm curious about what doodads you need to do such a thing. Like if I want a 6db boost centered at 12KHz with a 2 octave bandwidth what\how many gubbins are involved? Is it way more than the parts in these MIT or Transparent cables?
That cable so effectively killed life in sound that I was amazed. Doubly so after reading their sales literature, with pretty pictures of Him and Her playing the piano, of the sedate and sage atmosphere in the company, of everybody having a grave yet benevolent look in their quest of bringing light to audio.
That's awesome - I bet we won't be seeing any of your quoted reviews in their ads!Here's an idea: why not sell just the stuff inside the epoxied-up box with two RCA jacks on either end and let the user provide their own cables? You know, like a little adaptor jobbie. Heck, that should only cost...a few thousand. Tops!