JohnSwenson;640735 Wrote: > My take on the power cord issue is that power cords CAN make a > difference in sound, some times fairly significant changes, but it > doesn't take thousands of dollars to do it well. People selling $1000 > cords may very well have a cord which sounds better than many other > cords, but thats probably NOT caused by whatever cost the $1000 but by > some coincidental factor. > > The issue here is that what makes a cord sound good is not well > understood, there are many theories out there as to what is happening. > What usually happens is that someone came up with a hypothesis along > the lines of "super high purity metal might be a factor", so they build > a cord with very high purity metal, and low and behold it DOES sound > better. Well if that sounded better then ultra super high purity metal > should sound even better, right? But in reality the improvement in the > original had nothing to do with the metal but was caused by the > particular insullation used which was required to maintain the metal > purity during manufacfture. If that same insullation was used with > lesser purity metal you would get similar sound improvements for a lot > less money, but nobody makes such a combination because the slightly > more expensive insullation is only used with the high purity metal, > thus nobody actually tries that insullation with cheaper metal. > > This sort of thing is rampant in the industry. Someone comes up with > something that does improve sound, then goes crazy and spends a huge > amount of money getting that one paramter to its absolute pinicale of > perfection, not realizing that the original improvement was caused by > something else! > > Do I buy $1000 cords? No way, I build my own cords. The most expensive > one I have made is about $35. My power cords do sound different from > each other, I'm exploring different geometries, insullations, shielding > etc using relatively inexpensive materials. And its not just listening, > I can actually measure differences caused by the different cords. One > interesting finding from this is that different gear sounds better > with different cords, that REALLY complicates things! > > There is still a lot more work to come up with decent correlations as > to what cord type sounds best with what equipment. Even if I did have > good correlations it wouldn't do any good unless you make your own, > since most manufacturers won't aqctually tell you how their cords are > made and exactly what materials are used. > > The best advice I can give right now given the state of the market > place is to buy several different inexpensive cords from different > manufacturers and try them out on different equipment in your system. > If it doesn't make any difference you are not out a lot of money. On > the other hand you just might find a combination that DOES improve the > sound of your system. > > John S.
Nonsense! A chain is only as strong as its weakest link. What cables do you have behind your wall outlet? And what is after that? (Another place to pollute your power source. :P All sorts of devices pollute power line.) There is no power cord that will deliver clean power from dirty source. You can't fool physics. -- Bytec ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Bytec's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=17676 View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=88364 _______________________________________________ audiophiles mailing list audiophiles@lists.slimdevices.com http://lists.slimdevices.com/mailman/listinfo/audiophiles