@Georgehifi
Considering most of the personal/private reviews on fuses say they need burn in time, it might be wise to consider that it is, at this point, a logical extrapolation that the fuse has bent or stretched to a point where an optimal electrical signal has been achieved, thus effecting certain frequencies that are either more noticeable to someone used to the way their own particular system has sounded previous to the upgrade.
I can’t help but think an over the air TV does not have its picture passed through the wall wiring, yet the cathode ray gun was always optimized to take advantage of the 60HZ cycle to deliver 60 fields of non-interlaced video, with each field composed of odd or even lines of resolution and presented for 1/60 of a second so that two fields formed 1 frame and the 30FPS standard for video in the US was adopted by SMPTE and became the standard. That’s also the reason why a country with 50HZ, use 25FPS as their video standard and fields occupying 1/50 of a second. Persistence of vision is the phenomenon that is taken advantage of to fool the viewer into thinking the odd and even fields were viewed at the same time. Anyhow, it would not be unbelievable to me to think that someone could master fuse building in a way that could manipulate or engineer playback in a different way. And that’s all we’re talking about here, right? A change? Better or worse is subjective.
Considering most of the personal/private reviews on fuses say they need burn in time, it might be wise to consider that it is, at this point, a logical extrapolation that the fuse has bent or stretched to a point where an optimal electrical signal has been achieved, thus effecting certain frequencies that are either more noticeable to someone used to the way their own particular system has sounded previous to the upgrade.
I can’t help but think an over the air TV does not have its picture passed through the wall wiring, yet the cathode ray gun was always optimized to take advantage of the 60HZ cycle to deliver 60 fields of non-interlaced video, with each field composed of odd or even lines of resolution and presented for 1/60 of a second so that two fields formed 1 frame and the 30FPS standard for video in the US was adopted by SMPTE and became the standard. That’s also the reason why a country with 50HZ, use 25FPS as their video standard and fields occupying 1/50 of a second. Persistence of vision is the phenomenon that is taken advantage of to fool the viewer into thinking the odd and even fields were viewed at the same time. Anyhow, it would not be unbelievable to me to think that someone could master fuse building in a way that could manipulate or engineer playback in a different way. And that’s all we’re talking about here, right? A change? Better or worse is subjective.