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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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Hello again,
there has been a lot of chat lately about Goldmund using bog standard Pioneer boards and transports (and remotes) for their $12,000 CD player, this is interesting but what intrigues me more is one of their press releases where they announce their FAST power cable. Perhaps I am being ignorant, probably, but isnt the speed at which you get electrons from the socket to the device round about 46% of the speed of light assuming a passive conductor. If so how does Goldmund get the electrons there faster and does it matter. Also given a 50/60 hz cycle does this make any sense at all ? Puzzled of Philadelphia |
#2
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#3
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() wrote in message ... Hello again, there has been a lot of chat lately about Goldmund using bog standard Pioneer boards and transports (and remotes) for their $12,000 CD player, this is interesting but what intrigues me more is one of their press releases where they announce their FAST power cable. Perhaps I am being ignorant, probably, but isnt the speed at which you get electrons from the socket to the device round about 46% of the speed of light assuming a passive conductor. If so how does Goldmund get the electrons there faster and does it matter. Also given a 50/60 hz cycle does this make any sense at all ? **Of course not. You could, however, take them to task over this nonsense. The one thing you DON'T want in a piece of hi fi equipment is any nasty high frequency energy coming from the mains supply. IOW: ANYTHING other than 50Hz/60Hz sine wave is bad. What you really want is a SLOW mains cable (if such a thing existed). I'd complain to the company and tell that you want a slow mains cable, not a fast one, as fast cables allow high frequency transients through. That should send them scurrying. Trevor Wilson |
#4
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wrote in message
Hello again, there has been a lot of chat lately about Goldmund using bog standard Pioneer boards and transports (and remotes) for their $12,000 CD player, this is interesting but what intrigues me more is one of their press releases where they announce their FAST power cable. Perhaps I am being ignorant, probably, but isnt the speed at which you get electrons from the socket to the device round about 46% of the speed of light assuming a passive conductor. No, that's the speed of a wave in a conductor. Electron flow is much slower. http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasc...9/phy99092.htm If so how does Goldmund get the electrons there faster and does it matter. Goldmund does not speed electrons nearly as much as they speed the flow of your money into their bank accounts. Also given a 50/60 hz cycle does this make any sense at all ? Perhaps the most difficult to understand of all is how the power travels all that way on conventional power wiring, and presumably has all this propensity towards bad sound imposed on it, and then the last 6 feet of Goldmund power cable makes it all better again. |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Jan 22, 4:19*pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
wrote in message Hello again, * * * *there has been a lot of chat lately about Goldmund using bog standard Pioneer boards and transports (and remotes) for their $12,000 CD player, this is interesting but what intrigues me more is one of their press releases where they announce theirFASTpowercable. Perhaps I am being ignorant, probably, but isnt the speed at which you get electrons from the socket to the device round about 46% of the speed of light assuming a passive conductor. No, that's the speed of a wave in a conductor. *Electron flow is much slower. Thanks for the link http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasc...9/phy99092.htm If so how does Goldmund get the electrons there faster and does it matter. Goldmund does not speed electrons nearly as much as they speed the flow of your money into their bank accounts. That is pretty funny *Also given a 50/60 hz cycle does this make any sense at all ? Perhaps the most difficult to understand of all is how thepowertravels all that way on conventionalpowerwiring, and presumably has all this propensity towards bad sound imposed on it, and then the last 6 feet of Goldmundpowercablemakes it all better again. That must be one of those zen things :-) |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() " wrote: but what intrigues me more is one of their press releases where they announce their FAST power cable. Perhaps I am being ignorant, probably, but isnt the speed at which you get electrons from the socket to the device round about 46% of the speed of light assuming a passive conductor. NO, the electrons move much slower than that. They *vibrate* back and forth in fact at 50/60Hz. The *electric field* is what moves at some fraction of the speed of light. Claims about 'fast' power cables are simply LIES and fraud. Graham |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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#8
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![]() François Yves Le Gal said: they announce their FAST power cable. Yeah, you can buy a Porsche much FASTer. This remark gives some insight into the mystery of why Jerry Lewis is so popular in France. |
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