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How are your cables different from the one that TheeeChosenOne mentions and post a link to that also uses an air dielectric also. Steve Hoffman says, "Grover Interconnects are air core insulated with bare silver wire, nothing touching, with vintage RCA terminators. Pricing: 1/2 meter pair: $60.00 1 meter pair: $75.00 2 meter pair: $100.00" That pricing does not look bad to me. I also think the pricing from Cryotweaks that is also mentioned here is not bad for interconnect with Bybees and shielded with ESR.
I have some questions for audioengr from Empirical Audio. I have looked at the make up your interconnects and the pitch sounds good. I agree that the best dielectric would have to be none at all and think the non-insolated bare wire concept has merits. I also would be concerned about oxidation, especially with Copper. Your web site says you use "corrosion inhibitors inside". What exactly are you using for that?
Also, to be honest, and all quality issues aside, I think most of these guys here feel like $539.98 for a one meter pair and $609.98for a shielded one meter pair is a bit pricey. How are your cables different from the one that TheeeChosenOne mentions?
I also think the pricing from Cryotweaks that is also mentioned here is not bad for interconnect with Bybees and shielded with ESR. Being a Bybee distributor myself I know what effect they can have.
Bang for buck though I will likely still make my own. I used some 8mm locking RCA's from Apature and Teflon jacketed Silver coated Copper multi stranded wire (18 gauge) to make me a 10 foot pair using a three wire braid and I think I have about $28.00 in the materials for the pair. I can use the solid Copper Teflon insolated RCA's from SCI with the same wire and built that same 10 foot pair for about $58.00. It sure sounds good too. It is not quite as good to me as the Geortz but it is a lot cheaper.
I am not seeing that on the Bogdan pictured above. It looks like air only.Are you saying that this makes it more expensive also or just better, because your response to me was in justifying the additional expense of your higher priced cables. it seams to me that leaving out what is unnecessary would make it cheaper.
I have never had any durability problems with any that I have made or used. I have had a flexibility problem with some. The Bogdan pictured here is a good example of cables that might present that problem.I guess durability is something one could be proud of, but forgive me if I don't give a lot of value to being able to lift a small amp with the interconnects.
Ah 99.99% pure Silver from one company may not be as good as the Silver used by another?Are they cryo treated or something?I have heard clear differences in power cords that had been treated this way. Is this something that you are referring to?Since you and I both know that you do not make the wire itself and few companies here in the US actually do, then are you saying you have something special done to the wire after you receive it or something? How is the wire that you receive better?I have never had a sibilance problem with wire. How can this effect be caused by the wire?
You mean it is shielded in such a way as to minimize RFI noise or are you saying that you actively filter the noise found in the signal itself? Like the use of a Bybee filter.Braiding is of coarse also known to cancel out noise. Is your noise rejection more on these lines?
In this market too often you don't get nearly what you pay for. There are companies that are extremely proud of their work. 1 dollars worth of material for every 10 dollars worth of pride doesn't get very far with me.Sometimes a cable can clearly be better, but each person must ask themselves "is it 10 times as good", because it is 10 times as much, and often even 20 times as much.
I respectfully disagree with you here.While you may have control of the noise level your electronics may generate you have no control over the noise level found in your electricity or in the amount of RFI present in a given area.I am a lucky guy. I live in an area with fairly clean power and little RFI noise.But if I take a short trip (two hour drive) to Dallas, TX, all is a different story.The Bybees have there place, and I have not found them to in any way eliminate any part of the music.
I am not seeing that on the Bogdan pictured above. It looks like air only.
Are you saying that this makes it more expensive also or just better, because your response to me was in justifying the additional expense of your higher priced cables. it seams to me that leaving out what is unnecessary would make it cheaper.
Ah 99.99% pure Silver from one company may not be as good as the Silver used by another?
Are they cryo treated or something?
Since you and I both know that you do not make the wire itself and few companies here in the US actually do, then are you saying you have something special done to the wire after you receive it or something? How is the wire that you receive better?QuoteI have the wire custom-made to my specifications and then I do special processing and take special steps in the assembly as well after I recieve it.QuoteI have never had a sibilance problem with wire. How can this effect be caused by the wire? I have never heard any other systems other than those with my wire in them that did not have SOME sibilance. You probably have it, but until it is gone, you will not realize it. Most of my customers are shocked at how much grunge they used to listen to before they put my cables in. Just read some of the reviews and my customer feedbacks. QuoteYou mean it is shielded in such a way as to minimize RFI noise or are you saying that you actively filter the noise found in the signal itself? Like the use of a Bybee filter.No, the geometry of the cable cancels noise.QuoteBraiding is of coarse also known to cancel out noise. Is your noise rejection more on these lines?Something like this, except that braiding does not cancel noise very well. This is a common misconception. QuoteIn this market too often you don't get nearly what you pay for. There are companies that are extremely proud of their work. 1 dollars worth of material for every 10 dollars worth of pride doesn't get very far with me. Sometimes a cable can clearly be better, but each person must ask themselves "is it 10 times as good", because it is 10 times as much, and often even 20 times as much.There are a lot of unsophisticated, uneducated cable vendors out there. It's unfortunate and makes my job a lot harder.QuoteWhile you may have control of the noise level your electronics may generate you have no control over the noise level found in your electricity or in the amount of RFI present in a given area.Actually, you do. With proper grounding and avoidance of ground-loops, the only systems that really have noise problems are those in strong RF fields, such as at the top of hills with transmitting antennas nearby. In these rare cases, the only thing that works is shielded cables. I have used unshielded cables at numerous trade shows, in long lengths and never had any noise whatsoever. QuoteThe Bybees have there place, and I have not found them to in any way eliminate any part of the music.You don't know what you are missing until it reappears. QuoteIf your cables make a noticeable difference I'll know it. If the difference is worth the expense I'll buy it. Many others here will also. The trick is proving the additional cost is worth the difference. Many others will also question if the price is determined by the performance and what the market will bare or if it is based on the cost to produce. I tend to look at things that way myself.My customers feel that they are a good value and I charge a price that is based solely on the materials cost and the labor to produce them. I sell direct, so there is insufficient margin to sell through dealers.QuoteI am not willing to pay a lot for the pride of others, but do respect the cost involved in producing a product. I may simply look at things that way because I am a manufacturer more often than a consumer. Care to send out a handful of these for comparison to some of these guys? I've done this in the past to members of this forum. My cables were found to be the best at the time of that shootout. My newer designs are even better, but i barely have the time to send samples to reviewers. We are a small company, so I do a lot of the work myself.
I have the wire custom-made to my specifications and then I do special processing and take special steps in the assembly as well after I recieve it.QuoteI have never had a sibilance problem with wire. How can this effect be caused by the wire? I have never heard any other systems other than those with my wire in them that did not have SOME sibilance. You probably have it, but until it is gone, you will not realize it. Most of my customers are shocked at how much grunge they used to listen to before they put my cables in. Just read some of the reviews and my customer feedbacks. QuoteYou mean it is shielded in such a way as to minimize RFI noise or are you saying that you actively filter the noise found in the signal itself? Like the use of a Bybee filter.No, the geometry of the cable cancels noise.QuoteBraiding is of coarse also known to cancel out noise. Is your noise rejection more on these lines?Something like this, except that braiding does not cancel noise very well. This is a common misconception. QuoteIn this market too often you don't get nearly what you pay for. There are companies that are extremely proud of their work. 1 dollars worth of material for every 10 dollars worth of pride doesn't get very far with me. Sometimes a cable can clearly be better, but each person must ask themselves "is it 10 times as good", because it is 10 times as much, and often even 20 times as much.There are a lot of unsophisticated, uneducated cable vendors out there. It's unfortunate and makes my job a lot harder.QuoteWhile you may have control of the noise level your electronics may generate you have no control over the noise level found in your electricity or in the amount of RFI present in a given area.Actually, you do. With proper grounding and avoidance of ground-loops, the only systems that really have noise problems are those in strong RF fields, such as at the top of hills with transmitting antennas nearby. In these rare cases, the only thing that works is shielded cables. I have used unshielded cables at numerous trade shows, in long lengths and never had any noise whatsoever. QuoteThe Bybees have there place, and I have not found them to in any way eliminate any part of the music.You don't know what you are missing until it reappears. QuoteIf your cables make a noticeable difference I'll know it. If the difference is worth the expense I'll buy it. Many others here will also. The trick is proving the additional cost is worth the difference. Many others will also question if the price is determined by the performance and what the market will bare or if it is based on the cost to produce. I tend to look at things that way myself.My customers feel that they are a good value and I charge a price that is based solely on the materials cost and the labor to produce them. I sell direct, so there is insufficient margin to sell through dealers.QuoteI am not willing to pay a lot for the pride of others, but do respect the cost involved in producing a product. I may simply look at things that way because I am a manufacturer more often than a consumer. Care to send out a handful of these for comparison to some of these guys? I've done this in the past to members of this forum. My cables were found to be the best at the time of that shootout. My newer designs are even better, but i barely have the time to send samples to reviewers. We are a small company, so I do a lot of the work myself.
I have never had a sibilance problem with wire. How can this effect be caused by the wire?
You mean it is shielded in such a way as to minimize RFI noise or are you saying that you actively filter the noise found in the signal itself? Like the use of a Bybee filter.
Braiding is of coarse also known to cancel out noise. Is your noise rejection more on these lines?
In this market too often you don't get nearly what you pay for. There are companies that are extremely proud of their work. 1 dollars worth of material for every 10 dollars worth of pride doesn't get very far with me. Sometimes a cable can clearly be better, but each person must ask themselves "is it 10 times as good", because it is 10 times as much, and often even 20 times as much.
While you may have control of the noise level your electronics may generate you have no control over the noise level found in your electricity or in the amount of RFI present in a given area.
The Bybees have there place, and I have not found them to in any way eliminate any part of the music.
If your cables make a noticeable difference I'll know it. If the difference is worth the expense I'll buy it. Many others here will also. The trick is proving the additional cost is worth the difference. Many others will also question if the price is determined by the performance and what the market will bare or if it is based on the cost to produce. I tend to look at things that way myself.
I am not willing to pay a lot for the pride of others, but do respect the cost involved in producing a product. I may simply look at things that way because I am a manufacturer more often than a consumer. Care to send out a handful of these for comparison to some of these guys?
Thus far, Cryotweaks says they can put an Eichmann Bullet plug on their Bybeed ICs for $30 for the Copper ($319 total) and $89 for the Silver Bullets ($378).
Chosen One, I've got a sleeper for you,sounds pretty good too! MAD, Modern Audio Designs Pearl 1.Got them on Ebay, look like a Nordost type cable,locking plugs, and no I don't sell'em or work for the company. Here a link - http://www.modernaudiodesign.com/pearl.shtml
Stupid me,I didn't know , but their Pearl 1 sounds good in my system- running tests all day today comparing IC's.
The bogdan has each conductor in its own tube. This placed two layers of teflon tubing between the two conductors.
No, this makes them more difficult to build. And one must be more clever than just pulling wires through tubing. This is why my deisgns are patented.
I have never heard any other systems other than those with my wire in them that did not have SOME sibilance.
Most of my customers are shocked at how much grunge they used to listen to before they put my cables in. Just read some of the reviews and my customer feedbacks.
My customers feel that they are a good value and I charge a price that is based solely on the materials cost and the labor to produce them. I sell direct, so there is insufficient margin to sell through dealers.
We are a small company, so I do a lot of the work myself.
Hey audioengr, One more thing. There is a show coming up in a few months in your neck of the woods that it looks like I will wind up attending, maybe even exhibiting. http://www.vsac2003.com/ Are you going? lonewolfny42, Thanks, and I hope you enjoyed your audition of the Criterion's.
QuoteThus far, Cryotweaks says they can put an Eichmann Bullet plug on their Bybeed ICs for $30 for the Copper ($319 total) and $89 for the Silver Bullets ($378). $89!!! - I charge only $40 to change from copper to silver Bullet Plugs.