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degaussing
A bit off the point, but I am pleased to report now that the temperature here in Minnesota has dropped to near zero, all of our parts stored in unheated spaces until used are now cryogenically treated once again, at no extra cost.Regards,Frank Van Alsitne
This is the the kind of sneering that gets threads trashed.
To assert that the believers are just engaging in "magical thinking" is an insult. It implies that they are just weak minded individuals and their experience is not valid and they are just "hearing things".
I ask a legitimate question and you call it sneering? Why the insult?
I think he's refering to Frank's comment.
Yeah, it's funny, ha, ha. But I don't go over to his forum and sneer at him, so I don't appreciate the party pooper attitude. Yeah, I get a chuckle out of it, but it's well known around these parts what his feelings are on the topic. It isn't necessary. We've all read what his experience have shown him .
I would like more people just simply giving their impressions as pertaining to the original question, without anything added. Aside from that, I've enjoyed reading what everybody here has to say about what they've noticed.
My question is directed at the people who believe burn-in is a myth. And it is based on comments I've heard from non-believers who say that burn-in is more about your ears "getting used to the sound". Here is the question: When you get a new component or cables, do you think things sound different from when you first put them into your system versus a week or two later? In other words, do you hear changes and attribute them to your ears "getting used to the new sound"? Or do you simply not hear any difference over time?
There has been no data that I know of to substantiate that there are real measured changes.
...and still no one has thus far reported ever having measured the electrical specs of a new component's outputs and then taken the same measurements 500 hours later. So, while many poke fun at what others claim to hear, they haven't themselves tested the effect in question to scientifically put the notion to rest.Why?One would expect the engineer/technician/designer is best equipped to conduct such tests.
I use the only piece of test equipment that matters to me. My ears.
I'll be honest - what troubles me most about this thread is that we have manufacturers responding here - guys that make their living at this - who do not believe that break-in is a real component of audio design. Hey guys, put down your EE textbooks and pick up your material science and metalurgy texts books and study a bit about what happens to a piece of copper, steel, silver, etc. during the manufacturing process. I think you will find that in addition to the typical electrical properties there are also properties of grain structure within these metals which become disoriented during the manufacturing process. It is a proven fact that these grains re-align themselves over time and provide an "easier" path for electron flow. OK, as far as the "your ears adjust argument" I have this to say: I have modified hundreds of pieces of equipment over the years using what many of you would consider "boutique" parts and have gotten to the point where during "Break-in" I first listen to the component immediately after I complete the modification, then place the component in the burn-in room with a CD on repeat for 200+ hours. Amazingly, when I re-install the component in the system after "Burn-in" it sounds smoother, more articulate, and most always has better bass depth and definition, amongst other things. The point is, I am obviously not adjusting to the sound over time because I am not listening to the component during this time.Like I said, it troubles me that manufactureres will not allow themselves to think "outside the box" on this issue. Rest assured I would never purchase a product manufactured by any of these "shallow thinkers"Fire away ..