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If anyone can locate it, give it a shot. It snaps on and off easily to retrofit any cable. If possible, compare it with the Bybee filter to see what we're talking about. The best part about it is that it (or similar filter) is cheap to try out.
After years of experiments, I believe everything you place on or under a power cord affects the sound because of mechanical resonance changes, not because of any significant electrical properties. This includes ferrites. I was once a major believer in the electrical/electronic benefits of ferrites’ ability to absorb RFI/EMI from the electrical field around the power cord. Today, while I believe ferrites still do that, I question whether the sonic change from using ferrites has anything to do with the absorption of RFI/EMI. On the other hand, I now know ferrites change the sound of the cord mechanically. You can slide a ferrite along a power cord and get the same sonic signature you get from squeezing the power cord or sliding a wood block along it.
These passive devices block the effects of wire resonances and reflections and filter EMI noise on the power line -- noise that may occur over a bandwidth of 20-40,000 Hz (despite the fact that the nominal AC frequency is 60 Hz). These low-level noise artifacts may not be overtly audible in even a high-resolution system, but getting rid of them often pays big dividends in a more spacious, dynamic, and engaging sound.link: http://www.bybeetech.com/fi3.html#FI3
In any case, the ferrite clamp filters DO work. And that's all that matters! Right?!
I get the TDK ferrite clamps through a mail order catalog for 99 cents apiece. I am very selective where I place them, though...
Quote from: PsychicanimalI get the TDK ferrite clamps through a mail order catalog for 99 cents apiece. I am very selective where I place them, though...Would you be kind enough to reveal where you got them from? Also, where woud you place them? Thanks.[edit: typo]
If what he's saying is FACT, then one can achieve great sonic improvement simply by "squeezing" ICs, powercords, etc. I guess the next major upgrade for my system would be rubberbands or cable ties. That ought to be the best kept secret in audio.
Don't be so quick to laugh. Those of you who think that cable resonance is a joke are discounting many fundamental principals of basic physics. As a matter of fact, the smartest guy I have ever met in my life actually told me on the phone once to go and get some Ace bandages and wrap my speaker cables tightly. He was right. That got rid of MANY of the issues I was having with the cable getting confused at complex passages. So don't discount it, and laugh about it until you give it some basic thought.B
Anyway, I'm not discounting anything. In fact, I'm game enough to try "squeezing" some cables to see how they sound. And the fact that it can simply be done with virtual no cost makes it a howler.