@ audiozen you said,
"Back in 1998 I purchased a pair of Paradigm Active 20 speakers and a BAT
Vk3 preamp. I decided to buy an pair an eight foot of MIT interconnects
with the box on the cables. They retailed for $1000.00 and Audio
Advisor was selling them at 40% off. Hooked them up and a week later I
was disappointed with the sound quality and on a whim, decided to use
the very cheap 20 ft. stock pair of IC's that came with the speakers. I
removed them from the box, hooked them up, put on a disc and was blown
out the window. Completely shocked. The differences were not subtle, a
big major difference. Sounded like a completely different speaker
raising the performance to a whole new level I wasn't prepared for. I
said to myself, "Whats wrong with this picture?" and called Paradigm and
spoke to one of their engineers. I asked how much are your stock IC's
that came with the speakers? He said $20.00 a pair. He asked me the
model of the MIT's and said that IC will not work because its a high
capacitance low resistance cable. Our 20's are designed to use with low
capacitance high resistance IC's and mentioned that components from
different companies worked best with IC's that match the mathematical
values of their designs, and has nothing to do with the price of the
cable. The Cable Company in Ohio has complete charts of those
mathematical values from each high end company for their amps and
preamps. If you go into a broadcasting-recording supply house and buy
inexpensive cable that matches the value numbers of those components you
will be blown away at the performance of your gear."
Very interesting. Not meaning to railroad the discussion but are you saying TheCableCompany can help match the best IC's for your system based on mathematical value designs each company has for their components? If it's that simple why don't companies list those values in the specs for their products? I've got the Primare A32 power amp and Pre32 preamp (both fully balanced) and am presently using Violectrics XLR IC's (a brand TheCableCompany doesn't even carry) and I love the sound. I'd be curious to see if the mathematical values of these products truly compliment each other. I know it doesn't "really matter" as long as I like what I'm hearing...just curious.