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I received the Black Cat Veloce digital cable on Friday afternoon from Gopher, who due to component issues was unable to test the cable in his system.As a note, I did not read Tony’s write-up and am curious as to how each of our observations will play out. As well as those that follow my turn in the tour.You can view my system under the systems tab. To briefly summarize it: I primarily listen to a Pandora subscription, with digital S/PDIF out from (currently) an ASUS Xonar Essence STX sound card. The digital feed goes to an Audio Research DAC7, then to an Ayon Spirit II integrated amp via a Vaughn Interconnect. The amp powers Vaughn Pinot floor standers, via Teresonic Clarison speaker cable. As luck would have it, I just sold my Harmonic Technology Cyberlink Platinum Silver digital cable. Therefore, unfortunately, it will not be included in the comparisons (if folks are interested in its ‘signature’ in my system, please pm me). My primary digital cable is a Madrigal cable (with RCA to XLR terminations) and it is this cable that serves as my reference and in this instance, as the comparative cable. The Madrigal cable has been in my system for 11 months now.I am using the Veloce’s RCA connector on the source end and its BNC connector at the DAC end (there was a slight performance upside vs. RCA/RCA). I expect a BNC to BNC connection to be slightly superior to the RCA to RCA connection.The Veloce improved and stabilized after about two hours of playtime. I believe it is fully broken in and will only require a very short warm up for those downstream in the tour. The Veloce is not directional, a positive in my opinion. For my purposes, I used it so you can read the lettering on the jacket, left to right, with the left side/start of lettering closest to the source side.As for my listening ‘test methodology,’ I am not following any particular school of thought other than having the cable in system and listening exactly the way I listen to my music under a normal setting. In other words, no A/Bees on content or switching back and forth between cables after certain tracks/albums/time periods, etc. I’ve selected the following Pandora stations to do most of my ‘comparative’ listening: - Maroon (jazz)- Eddie Vedder- Lhasa- Azam Ali- Arvo Part- A. R. Rahman- Anoushka Shankar- Hector Zazou- Mercan Dede- William Ackerman, and - Xx.--- in no particular order or preference or time spent. I have also used redbook copies of Sixteen Horsepower and Eva Cassidy for non-Pandora based listening. These initial impressions, are based on nearly 8 hours of listening to the Black Cat Veloce in my normal listening environment. And a further 4 hours of listening with the Madrigal in system.The Veloce is a very good digital cable and is not just a killer value at its price, but an absolute no-brainer given that you can return it over a 60 day trial period, and can recoup its full cost if you upgrade to the Stereolab Reference XV Ultra. Now for the ‘but’ which applies only to me. Readers can make their own assessments. For me, this hobby is about preferences, and the Veloce doesn’t quite meet mine. Having got that out of the way, I still believe it is a very good cable and will work well for any number of folks and systems. There is nothing I can say that it does ‘wrong’ or is a significant weakness of note. So back to that ‘preference’ thing.Most of the points I am going to make below can be referenced by the phrase “just slightly.” There are not large variances here, and I am sure other ears will prefer the presentation the Veloce delivers based on their idea of what reproduced music sounds like (repeating that theme of preferences and valuations). To my ears, it is:Fast, accurate, has clarity, is forward, favors the higher frequencies, has slightly less body and weight across the frequency range and therefore, sounds lighter than what I prefer. With the Madrigal in my system, I find the music to be more laid back, more natural, with more body, weight and fullness; and therefore more aligned with what I enjoy and appreciate.I expect folks who appreciate a slightly forward and slightly airier presentation with an “energy” centered around clarity to love the Veloce. I can also see the Veloce offering an assist to those with systems they consider warm to their tastes or those who need to squeeze more out of the higher frequencies in their systems.For me, Chris Sommovigo’s effort with the Veloce has ensured that I will (and I will) be picking up his Reference XV Ultra, as long as it adds just that extra bit of richness and warmth and body I prefer.The Veloce is going to go back into my system tomorrow and I will be running it for a few days. At that time, I will follow through with final thoughts.
Where does the cable go now?