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...they cryoed practically my whole system 2.5 years ago. I sent them my BPT, Sunfire Theater Grand 4 processor and 2 Butler Audio 3150 tube hybrid amps....Cheers,Robin
Quote from: satfrat on 31 Jan 2008, 06:20 pm...they cryoed practically my whole system 2.5 years ago. I sent them my BPT, Sunfire Theater Grand 4 processor and 2 Butler Audio 3150 tube hybrid amps....Cheers,Robin Hey! Wha? I didn't know you could cryo a whole component! How do they do that? Dunk the amp in the cryo tank? Anyway, I don't have any experience with this cryo thing. I know it had been proven to change the properties of metal from that I've read. So, I guess it dose have some possibility on certain parts for audio. Hmmm.... maybe I should send out the steel and brass horn of my 106 years old Victor to be cryoed and see if that will improve the sound of this old talking machine. Take care,Buddy
As I understand it the cryogenic process is intended to anneal the metal in tubes
We were fortunate to have Dr. Helmut Trucks, P.E., one of the premier materials scientists work with us early on in discovering the mechanisms for the deep cryogenic process. Much of the research up to that time was conducted on steels, and based on austenite (soft carbon) to martensite (hard carbon) transformation as the reason for improvement. Dr. Trucks brought the physics side of the equation to light by stating that cryogenic temperatures removed much of the atoms' built-in kinetic energy, allowing the materials structure to align in a denser, more uniform pattern. This helped explain why materials other than steel responded so well to the deep cryogenic process
Jules......I have had dozens and dozens of tubes cryo'd over the years (by Cryogenics International). NONE have ever been damaged, nor have any of the pins loosened.
Anyway, I don't doubt claims of sonic improvements, but in the case of tubes I'd like to hear the difference after a couple hundred hours. I'll have to give it a try sometime... Dave
Opaqueice: if you look up "martensite finish temperature", you will find some information on this type of process. In steels, there is a diffusionless transformation of austenite to ferrite, this being a FCC to BCC transformation. At room temperature, the conversion is incomplete. There will be a low temperature called the "martensite finish temperature, where the transformation is complete. This is the "type" of transformation utilized in cryogenic treatments.Barrett, Nix, and Tetelman discuss this on page 311 of "The principals of engineering materials", 1973, Prentice-Hall.
Dr. Trucks brought the physics side of the equation to light by stating that cryogenic temperatures removed much of the atoms' built-in kinetic energy, allowing the materials structure to align in a denser, more uniform pattern.
Can atoms have "built in kinetic energy" that we can remove permanently?
Is it possible to change the density of a metal at a given temperature? [The alignment does seems possible.]
My tentative view on this is that while it might be possible to make changes and they could be useful for say gun barrels or swords [two of the other gadgets that are supposed to benefit] it would be a huge challenge to retain these properties under the extreme heat changes in an audio tube .... but this is all supposition isn't it ?
Could it be that when a metal has been cryoed, the molecular structure is more closely bonded so that when electricity is flowed thru it, there's less resistance, hense less noise?