Am I missing something?

You send electrons and the speaker cone moves out, o.k.
It comes back by itself.
But surely you want it to move _in_ as well? How do you
do that without positrons.

(I think that's right, most things in surround sound
seem counter-intuitive: So I doubt if it is positrons
out / electrons in?)

Anyway, I've learnt something: I always thought the
little arrows on all my speaker cables meant they were
made by workers in prisons (or is the arrow as a prison
sign non-ISO / ITU?).

Michael

> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 05:52:58PM +0530, umashankar mantravadi wrote:
>
>> havent you heard of tired electron distortion ? (TID). the electrons in
>> speaker wire get tired moving back and forth and not going anywhere. the
>> solution is to disconnect the speaker every few hours connect a battery
>> one side and short the other, so all the old electrons can be flushed
>> out (i think i read this in the wireless world) umashankar
>
> The problem with using a cheap battery for doing this is that
> those electrons which are really not able to move anymore (for
> example those having a broken leg, the result of smashing into
> another one going in the opposite direction) are not flushed
> out, but merely reduced to debris that will impede the flow
> of the new electrons.
>
> To really clean up your cable you need something more
> sophisticated and expensive, the more expensive the
> better.
>
> --
> FA
>
>
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