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Since capacitance is an issue of geometry and dielectric, I don't see how copper would have any greater capacitance than silver if the geometries and dielectrics are the same. How is this anomaly explained?
Well, if it's just an issue of capacitance and resistance, you can end up with the same capacitance and resistance of a set of silver cables using copper. So I was assuming from your original statement that there's something more going on than simply C and R.
And since there have yet to be any definitive blind test results for interconnects and speaker cables (at least when the differences between the cables are below known hearing thresholds), why shouldn't one also suspect that it's perception/wanting to believe stuff going on with respect to speaker cables and interconnects?
Quite true, but we're briefly talking about a wide area, and the discussion was started in the context of my experience.
Previously i had some whatever-over-priced monster cables, and switched to a set of self-built multi strand 20AWG pure silver conductors with pure cotton dielectrics and Bullet plug ends. The difference for me was that my new cables were better.
I wasn't speaking of the differences between copper and silver alone, although that is a fascinating topic.
Let's not forget induction!
Agreed. Perhaps my burnt fingers from working with silver solder, and pushing cotton down endless miles of silver strand have compromised my judgment!
Honestly though, my DIY silver wires are better than off the shelf Monsters. This should hardly be surprising.
So powercords then? I'd love to do some tests in a good environment. It sure seems to defy logic.
Let's do some blind tests and see what the verdicts are.
There's a good audio club where i live, perhaps this will be a great contentious topic for a future meet.
Doing proper blind testing (i.e. double blind) requires a tremendous amount of planning and effort. And if one isn't prepared to put commit to such an effort, I don't see much point in doing any testing at all. Just enjoy what you enjoy for whatever reason and leave it at that.
So powercords then? I'd love to do some tests in a good environment. It sure seems to defy logic.But no more so than interconnects and speaker cables.
QuoteAs far as audio jewelry.....What's wrong with that, anyways?Nothing....I traded in my gold chain....went to silver... (Thats a BSC Statement....nice power cord)
As far as audio jewelry.....What's wrong with that, anyways?
Oh man you're right. Sooo much effort, and it's doubly bad when people don't like to hear the results of the tests!
I must respectfully disagree on this one. With interconnects and speaker cables, they're directly involved in the communication between said devices. With power cords, they're a player in the system, but are removed by a number of stages from directly being a signal conductor. There's the power supply, filter caps, the same $.2 resistors that most people use, the same mosfet transistors that most people us (if SS) - etc., you see where i'm going.
It's like saying the truck which drove the water to the soup factory makes a difference in the taste of the soup. Well, not really, but you see what i mean?
Any characteristics of a given cable would be marginalized by the rest of the amplifier system.
So i have to disagree that a power cable is AS involved in the process, as a conductor, as the direct conductors of interconnects and speaker cables are.
That sentence is also one of horrific grammar, but i'm tired and it will have to do.
Different geographic areas have vastly different power supplies. Certain areas back east run 'brown' - IE a lower voltage, while some areas have wandering frequency issues. Heck, Europe and Asia at 50hz and NA at 60hz is a drastic difference!I'd say geographical location has a significantly larger impact on the current going into any amplifier, than any cord could possibly have.
However if one has a system capable of revealing a lot of musical detail and good software that they are very familiar with, it's pretty easy to hear the diff.
If someone wanted to question my sanity over what I thought I heard, my response would simply be, "bite me".
Do I think I could do the test that we did with those particular cords and be consistent. Yes.
No one should ever question your sanity.
Now bite me and go to bed. It's 3:00AM back there for crying out loud! se
The unfortunate part comes in the education process where "science" is taught not as a process, but as dogma (a series of facts to blindly be accepted), leaving no room for doubt or nonconformance.We share the human need to understand the hows of the universe and put it all within a nice system of explanations. Einsten worked for decades on such a unifying theory. Conversely when something can't be explained we try to ignore it, because it doesn't fit into our comfy understandable way of thinking. That is the technical (dogmatic) thinking, not the scientific. The scientific process accepts what is experienced and tries to explain it. To say everything should be explainable using science is more dogma.