I trained as a biological oceanographer, and my experience with electronics beyond plugging them in and turning them on is taking delicate research instruments out of the ocean where a seal leaked and trying to resuscitate them 1,000 away from the nearest electronics shop, wiring my house and building custom power cables for audio equipment that I hope will not destroy audio gear or cause a fire. I have a rudimentary understanding of resistance, capacitance and continuity, and beyond that, it’s pretty much try something in my current system and see how it sounds.
Scientists are professional skeptics, and are paid to knock the crap out of ideas until they either wither or hold up under scrutiny. I have had plenty of my ideas beaten down and a few hold up. With any audio gear, I am always a skeptic until I hear the results for myself. If I am making a large audio investment ( for me), I will seek second opinions and have arranged blind tests with people whose ears I trust. Through my audio journey, I have determined that cables matter a lot, but results don’t always match linearly with investment.
All that said, I am perfectly comfortable having my ideas and comments challenged here by people who have a lot more formal training and experience in this field than I do. I brought up the patent process as a possible place where different concepts and claims for exotic or new audio cable designs get vetted by a neutral third party out of the glare of advertising and competing claims of glory in the marketplace. Based on y’all’s comments, this suggestion was misguided. Both my brother and his son are electrical engineers who have patents for things I completely don’t understand, and they are not at liberty to divulge the intended use. Perhaps I should have asked them first about the patent process before bringing it up here. LOL
BTW, I referenced Caelin Gabriel’s patents in this thread because I am aware that he has an engineering background and I know (from effective marketing on his part) that he has patented a number of his product ideas. I own some of his gear and it works well enough, but I would not call myself a fan boy.