Fuses that matter.


I have tried six different fuses, including some that were claimed to not be directional. I have long used the IsoClean fuses as the best I have heard. No longer! I just got two 10 amp slow-blows WiFi Tuning Supreme fuses that really cost too much but do make a major difference in my sound. I still don't understand how a fuse or its direction can alter sound reproduction for the better, but they do and the Supreme is indeed! I hear more detail in the recordings giving me a more holographic image. I also hear more of the top and bottom ends. If only you could buy them for a couple of bucks each.
tbg
Geoffkait, I have been unable to find the data that you found on the Hi-Fi Tuning webpage. Can you give a specific address. Measuring resistance would be easy enough to do.
If it's so easy why don't more people do it? Lol

http://www.hifi-tuning.com/pdf/wlfr.eng.pdf
I saw this awhile back. It is also evident to the benefit of cryogenically treating materials. My mono bloc amps have newly redesigned circuit boards and of course all the parts including the transformers and magnets have been cryo treated at least twice. I haven't moved or changed any other device in months waiting for the amp re assembly to begin. I wonder if the magnets would now show a lower resistance after nearly being frozen in time. Tom
Theaudiotweak, my first reading of these data, suggest that cryoing increases resistance. I love the Tesla coil treatment that Syn. Res. does but find cryoing questionable, perhaps because some such treatment is not done right.
Norm the T3 has lower resistance when cryo'd the T2 has the opposite result. Tom