0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 27500 times.
Break-in? Speakers are linear motors and amplifiers are well....amplifiers for linear motors. cables bring current to the motor(s) via wire (cables) with instructions to go in or out..I can't take it anymore!
Paul,Your P.S. is offensive and inappropriate. I'm asking you as a personal favor to edit it out.TIA,Paul
P.S. The Nazis didn't believe in cable break-in.
Mega buck cables are IMHO are the THE shameless scam of audiophilia.And ,yes, I've heard the Nordhost VAllhalla in my system...................not impressed.
What are the ANTI JUMPERS SUPPOSED TO DO?
Think of a non OTL tube amp driving something like Maggies. I will tell you from personal experience that when you bump up the load to 8 or 16 ohms, something like a VTL really sings driving maggies intstead of trying to drive the 4 ohm load.Bryan
I am an agnostic audiophile. I have no idea if there is cable burn in. Go to the Slim Devices forum where we discussed "brain Burn in"There is a theory that posits that as the brain learns the new sound of a component the brain gets better at the info that the component presents to the ear. We become better at decoding auditory info the more we hear it. As a professional musician this is what we experience with ear training, where we have to do melodic,harmonic and rhythmic dictation.the more we do it , the better we get at decoding that info. Therefore it is plausible that this phenomena explains the burn in effect that some experience after time with a component that " shouldn't " have burn in (or break in).It might be that I, as a musician who is trained to detect pitch, harmony and rhythm and write it down immediately , might have a shorter"brain burn in" time than someone who doesn't have an ear training background.It may also be that some people are more innately able to rapidly decode new aural info and therefore need less brain burn in (BBI)than others. This MIGHT explain why some people experience burn in and others don't.Thus the fact that it is subjective doesn't negate either the subjectivist or the objectivist view of audio.Burn in may simply be the innate or learned ability to decode new aural information.I think linguists, physcologists and neurolagists are exploring this area.Tom