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You are not the only person to notice the change in sound. I have always used the upper connections with my speakers.The owners manual for the Von Schweikert VR-2's have the following wiring instructions:"The best sound and transparency from the VR-2 results from bi-wiring the speakers, but if a bi-wire set of cables is not initially available, use the supplied jumper plates. Connect the cables to the upper binding posts for the best sound quality.*If you connect the main cable to the woofer and then use the jumper upwards to the tweeter, you will be able to hear a slight loss of clarity, since there will now be two connections in the signal path instead of just one to the high resolution tweeter."Wayne
Dennis,I take offense at your comments about my jumpers, they didn't do anything to you. But, seriously, I didn't want to start something here. Should the jumpers sound the same whether on top or bottom?
There are just far too many factors involved with audio equipment and human hearing to share these things. I suggest that you take what you've learned and use it for yourself only.
This sums up how I feel as well. I've learned to just keep these things to myself, or at least off public forums. Whichever "side" you take, you'll get flamed. If you do hear, or even think you hear a difference for the better, just enjoy! If you don't hear (or think you hear) a difference, spend your money elsewhere and return said product. It's really just that simple. The hard part comes when you try to unbiasedly convince others that what you're hearing is real or not real; that's when things get messy, and that's why we should probably avoid it.
I'm not an electrical engineer. I don't know how much a decent jumper could degrade the signal flow. But I sure can't figure out why there should be any directional impact. There certainly isn't for speaker wire--so I would suggest you replace the jumpers with wire and see what you hear. That would be the logical next step.
While retired, I am a BSEE and I totally agree with Dennis here. There would have to be something significantly wrong with the jumpers to make a sonic difference IMO as described. Still, if someone hears a difference and is happy, whether or not it makes sense or has any scientific validity, that's fine with me.Paul
What the hell are "directional" jumpers
The last time I listened, audio was an AC signal, you know, current flows in BOTH directions! I guess the Audio Boutiquers aren't aware of that fact!
Most "Audio Boutiquers" are EE's, but just the wrong kind. They are Enthusiastic Entrepeneurs, not Electrical Engineers.