What the, and I cannot overstate this, fuck?
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@bloor I remember the good olden days when every household had some nice, mostly midrange hifi system. Was a bit of a status symbol and I guess mobility and space grew more important for the majority.
And now you only have super enthusiasts or people that listen to audio on a sh.. bluetooth speaker.
On the other hand that allowed me to gather some equipment for cheap.
Addit: preowened 90s /2k midrange stuff
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@bloor audiophile rocks
Yes they want you to buy rocks meant to improve sound somehow???
These are almost $500 but there's more expensive ones
https://www.ebay.com/itm/296707135133
https://youtu.be/3uCYXER3oZI@Jes @bloor
This revew of audiophile rocks is hilarious. Sadly the website and youtube channel are now closedhttp://www.adventuresinhifiaudio.com/26/01/2018/audiophile-rocks-down-the-rabbit-hole-once-again/
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@bloor is that a cope cage for the cable within, to defend against FPV drone-armed rabbits who'd like to chew on it ?
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@bloor Those would make great movie props. As for making great audio cables, they'd probably do exactly as well as everything else
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@dazo @tony @bloor Psychology works both ways. When I bought an amp and speakers (1990s) I declined to buy cable. I said that I'd use mains flex (Electronics Australia had tested it and shown good results), knowing it would wind up the salesperson. He couldn't bear for that to be done so ended up giving me about 4m of silly Kimber Kable. It does the job, but no way was I paying for it.
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@bloor
No, seriously, I need some answers -
@ericphelps there will be zero cancellation though, because they arenโt twisted and (i think) theyโre single pole.
To my eye theyโve created a cage dipole. I think if anything itโll pick up more rubbish.
@bloor Yah, it's difficult to see what they've done with the black wires. I may have assumed they were weaved (if not twisted) โ and my assumption might be wrong.
At first I thought they were doing something to minimize skin effect, but when it turned out to be power lines, it required a re-think.
I try to assume people aren't complete idiots and that there is some small effect they're chasing. Your cage dipole, effectively making a coaxial line, may be a better guess.
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@bloor @fabi1cazenave what's this supposed to do, apart from quickly separating your from your hard-earned cash? Faraday cage around your cable to avoid noise on the signal?
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In theory, itโs people who care a lot about audio quality. They often claim to have better than average frequency range in their ears (many do, but a lot claim to hear things only bats can actually hear).
For a long time, a lot of consumer audio equipment was pretty terrible, so there were real reasons for wanting something better, I remember listening to a CD that Iโd heard many times on my CD player and ripped to my iPad and discovering that CD player from the โ80s had completely lost a load of low-volume bits and there was material that would probably have been audible on an expensive player in the โ80s and was easily audible on a cheap player in the early 2000s.
At the same time, the Loudness War happened. Music execs found that people were more likely to like music if it was loud the first time they heard it. So they started making CDs louder. But CDs have a fixed dynamic range, so making it loader lost detail. They couldnโt do this with records because the needle would jump out of the track, so we had a weird period where LPs had better audio fidelity than CDs. Unfortunately, LPs are really finicky and itโs very easy to scratch them if you donโt perfectly balance the stylus to avoid more than minuscule pressure on the surface.
So, to listen to the highest-quality music, you needed a moderately expensive record deck, a decent amplifier (and pre-amp: again, LPs are annoying to play), and speakers. And it was fairly noticeable if you got any of these wrong.
But then DACs got a lot better. Cheap USB audio adaptors for computers had much better precision than anything available in the โ80s, and could be placed outside of the case and away from RF interference from the computer. AAC audio supports a variable dynamic range (so bumping the loudness is just a scaling factor, not a loss of precision). Baseline speaker and amplifier quality improved a lot. By the mid 2000s, fairly cheap equipment gave better sound quality than anything you could buy in the โ90s.
By then, an entire industry had grown up to cater to people who wanted the best sound quality possible and an even larger group of people who wanted to be seen as having the best sound quality. It moved from music appreciation to conspicuous consumption as a primary market driver. And that made it a ripe target for scams.
For analogue things, there were obvious things you could sell, like cables with gold-plated connectors. Gold is a good conductor and, unlike copper, doesnโt corrode, so this would make a difference (whether the difference is audible is another matter). But the move to mostly digital paths made this harder. You got very silly things like โaudiophile gradeโ Ethernet cables and optical connectors, which ignored the fact that the digital protocols had built-in error correction and that audio is staggeringly low bandwidth in comparison to other things carried over these connections so thereโs space for a lot of error correction. A load of these things can be run over a wire coathanger with no loss in quality.
The entire ecosystem became dominated by very silly things. But theyโre all quite interesting because they have some plausible-looking science behind them, which then goes off in a nonsense direction. For example, Ethernet is an electrical protocol, so signal quality matters. Gold is a good conductor. Gold connectors on Ethernet cables will reduce signal degradation. Pay no attention to the fact that the Ethernet standard is specified based on specifically rated cables and wonโt be any better on ones with marginally better connectors.
My guess from the picture is that someone has noticed that electrical noise from a power supply can be a problem and has built something that looks very plausibly like it would solve that.
@david_chisnall @hiisikoloart @bloor In photography, we have measurbators.
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@dazo @tony @bloor Psychology works both ways. When I bought an amp and speakers (1990s) I declined to buy cable. I said that I'd use mains flex (Electronics Australia had tested it and shown good results), knowing it would wind up the salesperson. He couldn't bear for that to be done so ended up giving me about 4m of silly Kimber Kable. It does the job, but no way was I paying for it.
If it would have been me, I would have accepted as well - but sold the cables afterwards ๐คช
I see Kimble twists the pairs. The physics behind the twisting does have an effect. That can be calculated and there will be scientific evidence of the effect. There are no doubts here.
But it will not be noticeable on shorter lengths for home hifi equipment use, as well as the current and voltage in home hifi systems. You probably need to go at least 20-30m, probably even higher like closer to 100m and above to have a noticeable effect. Which is why the Electronics Australia findings are accurate and valid.
And if your home hifi loudspeaker and amp are 20-100m or more apart ... then you have a setup which would require some rethinking for a lot of other reasons.
Of course, such details like this stings a lot if you've cashed out a lot of money for 5m of speaker cables. Then you "need" to claim you hear the difference to feel less like an, well, idiot.
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@bloor
Missing some led lighting here.
Or will that be the next version?
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@bloor breakout cable
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@ben @dazo @bloor Like this for example.. looks suspiciously like someone rebranded a ยฃ10 netgear switch..
https://www.audioaffair.co.uk/english-electric-8switch-audio-grade-ethernet-switch
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@bloor Looks like an special type of antenna feed line: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reusenleitung Love the aesthetics, but hope the insulation is up for the mains task.
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@ben @dazo @bloor Like this for example.. looks suspiciously like someone rebranded a ยฃ10 netgear switch..
https://www.audioaffair.co.uk/english-electric-8switch-audio-grade-ethernet-switch
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@bloor absolutely brilliant. I love it.
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The difference in the ProTools checks might have been the cable, but can just as well have been some other related things. Signals can be affected by magnetic interference (audio is AC voltage), so if there are other power cables laying closer or further away from the speaker or signal cables may just be enough to make a slight difference. Or if the cable was too long and curled up vs being straight. In some cases with power cables, other equipments plugged in at the same power outlet may cause a slight difference - due to the power drawn, which impacts the magnetic aspects.
In regards to the magnetism aspects ... you know the amp measurement devices you just clamp over the cable, not actually connecting to wires ... that's just a coil "wrapped around" the cable measuring the magnetic field and from that calculates the amps passing through.
But yeah, for digital signal paths .... it's all in the DAC at that point. Of course, disrupted bits in the transfer can cause noise. But not clarity details. And the digital signal paths certainly has enough error correction to not bit-flip data hitting the DAC in the end. Gee, that's just hilarious.
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@bloor Staubsauger-Roboter!
