You know, what I suggest is you try shielded and unshielded power cables. Make some yourself, inexpensively. Find the Parts Connexion.
See if you find a difference.
I suggest using
See if you find a difference.
I suggest using
How I would measure cables
Power cables oddly are probably the easiest to measure, since you can do a lot of it with a regular DVM. Speaker cables and interconnects are harder, but I have a suggestion: rather than try to measure the cable itself, measure its effects on your system. Place a microphone at the listening position and do a 20-20KHz sweep. Record the actual frequency response and distortion across the band. Then make the cable change and do the test again. A customer of mine did this for filter capacitor changes and was able to show that an improved filter capacitor resulted in lower distortion in his listening room. Some cables **seem** like they help certain systems play bass better; if that is really true you should be able to measure the results. A lot of software is available that might allow you to do most of this using your laptop in the listening position. |
Another pointless discussion from the people who yell "PROVE IT TO ME" all over the Internets, with no desire whatsoever to try for themselves. Of course said people would dismiss anybody sharing their experience of ownership and usage as placebo, psychoacoustics, and such, but nothing replaces EXPERIENCE, even some measurements made with a questionable tool (i.e. Null Taster of the famous Ethan Winer). And yet, if you searched a bit, you will find plenty of info from cable manufacturers showing the rationale behind their product. Example: https://positive-feedback.com/audio-discourse/rcl-part-1/ https://positive-feedback.com/audio-discourse/rcl-part-2-roger-skoff-cables/ |
Speaker cables and interconnects are harder, but I have a suggestion: rather than try to measure the cable itself, measure its effects on your system. I think both can be measured the same way, and speaker terminals are the least room dependent. :) That's my idea though. We can do both steady state measurements of power cords, as well as measure the playback of an entire musical track. This actually gets us to the gathering data portion of the work. After this, we need to go hunting for clues about differences. That's a lot of data to sort through, but with some programming skill, straightforward to automate. You want to know what effect a power cable ultimately has on your system? Sure. Change cords, and see how the speaker outputs change, if at all. Same for power conditioners, etc. It would probably be useful to develop a suite of analysis steps to compare phase, amplitude, frequency and total output routinely. It could be very instructive, and lead to completely new ways of evaluating gear. |