Hello All,
Just a semi-related anecdote, I’ve got a large commercial building with a crazy-fun-exasperating sound system (posted in virtual systems, Village Baker Madness). One time I had the great idea to hook up a pair of Jamo E770’s to my NAD 355BEE with each channel needing over 250 feet of wire! (Up columns, through ceilings, over roofs, through rafters etc...)
Of course, I did NOT use Nordost’s top wire. Instead I picked up a cheapo spool at Home Depot. After tightening the last connection and brushing the insulation dust off my chest, I cued up Dido’s Sand in my Shoes. I’m a sucker for that song and I know it well. I was..... bummed. Only the midrange sounded OK, the rest of the audio-band was extremely attenuated. But I let it play for days anyway. And I was away from it; we needed sound in that remote area for a future event and at least I had it hooked up.
So after an inadvertent burn-in of new but generic 14 AWG wire, in a situation that if nothing else would exaggerate any change in sound, I learned that YES, wire does change after carrying an electric current over time. The highs and lows filled in dramatically and conclusively! I could even say that those Jamo’s sounded great! And I pride myself in my vigorous skepticism, and consider the scientific method to be humanity’s true rudder.
~Oran
Just a semi-related anecdote, I’ve got a large commercial building with a crazy-fun-exasperating sound system (posted in virtual systems, Village Baker Madness). One time I had the great idea to hook up a pair of Jamo E770’s to my NAD 355BEE with each channel needing over 250 feet of wire! (Up columns, through ceilings, over roofs, through rafters etc...)
Of course, I did NOT use Nordost’s top wire. Instead I picked up a cheapo spool at Home Depot. After tightening the last connection and brushing the insulation dust off my chest, I cued up Dido’s Sand in my Shoes. I’m a sucker for that song and I know it well. I was..... bummed. Only the midrange sounded OK, the rest of the audio-band was extremely attenuated. But I let it play for days anyway. And I was away from it; we needed sound in that remote area for a future event and at least I had it hooked up.
So after an inadvertent burn-in of new but generic 14 AWG wire, in a situation that if nothing else would exaggerate any change in sound, I learned that YES, wire does change after carrying an electric current over time. The highs and lows filled in dramatically and conclusively! I could even say that those Jamo’s sounded great! And I pride myself in my vigorous skepticism, and consider the scientific method to be humanity’s true rudder.
~Oran