Cryogenics
On Feb 18, 12:15�am, Bob Woodward "Bob wrote:
wrote:
A few months ago, both ScottW and Howard chided me for remarking that
a pair of headphones I had for review, the ALOAudio Grado SR225s, had
cryogenically-treated, cotton-insulated cable. �
Why does this abracadabra almost exclusively show up in the
playback-chain. That is, at the consumers end.
While even the finest recordings you are playing have passed through a
multiple of apparatus / circuits / interlinks ( that they call cables )
connectors / ordinary op-amps and electrolytic capacitors.
None of them treated.
How, do you think, can a cryo cotton cable bring the reproduced sound
closer to the original ?
Start listening to music !
Robert
Who has changed from Audiophile to Melomane long ago.
Your statement presupposes two things that aren't necessarily true.
One thing is that the exact chain of technologies that produced the
sound need to be present to replay it. The second is that "closer to
the original" is the ultimate objective. If you're truly a
"melomane," then you'd get that in a second.
I've never said that cryogenically-treated cables are more accurate.
If I had, then your comments may apply.
Boon
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