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Arny Krueger
January 27th 08, 12:22 PM
http://soundmindaudio.com:80/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=25&Itemid=1

"
Wait, Brian! You're talking about liquid material around the conductors,
right? No.

Then you're talking about liquid inside the jacket for extra damping and
shielding, right? No.

You're not talking about LIQUID METAL, are you? Like a LIQUID metal is
actually carrying the audio signal? YES!

The conductors are an alloy of Gallium and Indium inside of tubes which are
sealed and attached in proprietary fashion to RCA jacks and spade lugs for
use in these magnificent sounding cables! The stuff's ACTUALLY LIQUID AT
ROOM TEMPERATURES!
"

"
How do these totally revolutionary, totally different, patent-pending liquid
alloy conductors SOUND? Liquid. Never hard, never edgy, never dry.
Liquid. Sweet, juicy, tasty (don't drink it, kids!), and delicate, with
dynamics, both micro and macro, which will ASTONISH you. Timbral accuracy
which is really uncanny. Soundstaging which DEFINES soundstaging....not
just out to the edges of the studio space, but with FOCUS, too!

How do these conductors differ electromagnetically than all other cables?
Look up MHD and EHD...that's short for megnetohydrodynamics and
electrohydrodynamics. Look 'em up. Read about it, and you'll get a better
idea.....
"

WindsorFox-{SS}-
January 28th 08, 10:23 AM
Bret Ludwig wrote:
> There's a lot to be said for good old Hg. What it does to copper is
> not one of them.

Uhh, what happens if you develop a bubble??

--
"Yah know I hate it when forces gather in ma' fringe..." - Sheogorath

"Daytime television sucked 20 years ago,
and it still sucks today!" - Marc Bissonette

Arny Krueger
January 28th 08, 12:45 PM
"Bret Ludwig" > wrote in message


> There's a lot to be said for good old Hg. What it does to
> copper is not one of them.

So use noble metal contacts.