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Yeah, maybe. But if contact resistance might be a significant portion of audibility improvement, then what does that say about the "sound" of the fuse elements themselves? There's nothing about these fuses that makes any sense from an objective viewpoint. It's disappointing to see people wasting money on this type of nonsense.Dave.
Whatever became of this? Did fuses of a higher rating help Steve with his sinus issues? My MMGs (which I love, esp now that they are on raised stands) say "4-amp" on the fuses and I'd like to play with higher ratings. Just seems like the stock fuses are incredibly thin to be carrying the same signal that many of us obsess over elsewhere in the path. Or do I have that wrong? OTOH, I don't want to do away with them entirely, and I see no reason to. And FWIW I'm not talking about 'audiophile grade' fuses, whatever they may be. I just want to go up to 5 or 10 amperes and it suddenly seems like 5 won't be worth the trouble.'Any thoughts? My knowledge is next to nothing so please don't get too excited.
Send the fuses to me last and I'll test them.....objectively. Dave.
Thin doesn't matter if the wire is short....
Thanks for your comprehensive--and comprehensible--response. I feel better now about doing nothing. My listening is almost exclusively acoustic piano jazz these days, and the Maggies really shine with that. Also, I have other speakers running which cover the low notes when required. Anyway, you're right that the MMGs are cheap enough that if I do blow them I'll have a great excuse for upgrading to the 1.7s I've had my eye on