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On a whim after talking with a couple of audiophile friends, I tried changing my jumper setup on my speakers. Originally, I ran my speaker cables to the low-frequency terminals on my speakers, then jumped from the low terminals to the high terminals. I just changed it so that the speaker cables run to the high terminals, then jump down to the low terminals. Whoa...! I wasn't expecting to hear much difference, but the results are stunning quite frankly. Soundstage has opened up, detail has increased by more than I thought possible...I am 99% sure I am not imagining the differences. Anyone else have an ability to try this? I've done it to two of my systems, and in both cases the changes were not small...
Congratulations! You just disproved Ohm's law!!You should submit your works to be evaluated by the scientific community. You may be up to a Nobel Prize!This is the most outrageously ridiculous claim I have seen in this board (and I have seen lots of bad ones). This is the equivalent of disproving the Law of Gravity. It is so absurd that it actually beats the "power-cord-makes-a-difference-in-system-sound" claim.
Quote from: LightFire on 3 Nov 2006, 01:27 amCongratulations! You just disproved Ohm's law!!You should submit your works to be evaluated by the scientific community. You may be up to a Nobel Prize!This is the most outrageously ridiculous claim I have seen in this board (and I have seen lots of bad ones). This is the equivalent of disproving the Law of Gravity. It is so absurd that it actually beats the "power-cord-makes-a-difference-in-system-sound" claim.What part of Ohm's Law (see below) did he disprove by saying he heard a difference?1. Ohm's Law deals with the relationship between voltage and current in an ideal conductor. This relationship states that:The potential difference (voltage) across an ideal conductor is proportional to the current through it. The constant of proportionality is called the "resistance", R.Ohm's Law is given by: V = I Rwhere V is the potential difference between two points which include a resistance R. I is the current flowing through the resistance. For biological work, it is often preferable to use the conductance, g = 1/R; In this form Ohm's Law is: I = g VGeorge
Perhaps he more like contradicted Kirchhoff's circuit law instead, where it says that the sum of currents going to a certain point is equal to the sum of currents leaving that point. In other words. He said that a shorted circuit is not a shorted circuit. Still it is absurd.
Lightfire,I think there are valid technical reasons (as stated above) that explain why the different connection methods can sound different.Other than your outlandish words and behavior, you have provided no technical evidence or reasons to support your claims.George
Now perhaps I got something wrong but, if I am right those bi-amping jumpers are like thick, large, and a few inches long gold plated copper, which consists in a short circuit! Whatever arrives in one pole goes to the other pole in a speed very close to the speed of light. It consists of electrons flowing at near speed of light in a distance of a few inches!!!Can you feel the "pain" now?!
Quote from: LightFire on 3 Nov 2006, 02:34 amNow perhaps I got something wrong but, if I am right those bi-amping jumpers are like thick, large, and a few inches long gold plated copper, which consists in a short circuit! Whatever arrives in one pole goes to the other pole in a speed very close to the speed of light. It consists of electrons flowing at near speed of light in a distance of a few inches!!!Can you feel the "pain" now?! I think the part that you are getting wrong is to think that when you hook up a speaker cable to the low terminal, the only place the current can go is thru the jumper to the high terminal. This is not correct...it splits, with some of the current going thru the jumper and some current going to the woofer. In the case where the speaker cable is hooked up to the high terminal, some of the current flows thru the jumper, and the rest flows thru the tweeter. So Kirchoff's Circuit Law remains intact, but the distribution of current flow is not consistent from one setup to the other.On the street where I grew up, there are 3 Nobel Prize winners (all for Physics)...I wish I could earn the 4th, but I am pretty sure I'm not disproving any laws of physics here...
Obviously you are not disproving anything. The "current split" is negligible (things moving at speed of light, remember?) And when I say negligible it means way beyond the capability of measurement instruments detection, let alone the human hearing.