Cerious Technologies NEW Graphene Cables


Now, this is not a advertisement, just a posting sharing my experience on some well made great sounding cables at a very reasonable price. Besides, I don't think Cerious Technologies is set up for a big influx of cable orders.

But, if you get the chance to try these cables, please do.

I have been interested in the newer cables coming out that are using Graphene as a conductor. SR cables seemed interesting, but I always hated the way there cables had all those extra wires (with the active shields and such). I then noticed an ad early in I think November or December from Cerious Technologies for Graphene cables. I investigated how the cables were assembled and it seemed like quite a laborious process.

I ordered (with a 30 day money back guarantee) the balanced Graphene interconnects, and boy did they impress me. Such depth, soundstage, realism, frequency smoothness, effortless sound. I was truly impressed!  I now have a complete loom of the Cerious Technologies Graphene cables. That is; interconnects, speaker cables, digital cables and power cords.

I ended up selling all of my other cables and to those of you who have read my postings know that cables have always been my curiosity.

So, as I began this post, let me again iterate, I have no alliance to the company, my posting is for those of you looking for an great alternate high quality Graphene made cable without spending a fortune.

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I am Bob Grost from Cerious. Just wanted to clear some things up! Graphene is used in our cables as part of a complex composite conductor. Whenever you have multiple strands in a conductor electrons will stay "attached" to a single strand until you get a transient which has significant energy and the electron will then "jump" from strand to strand. This is how semiconductors works. There are 2 problems here. The first is that this characteristic causes time smear which gives the cable differing properties with amplitude. In simple terms the cable behaves one way with quiet music and another with loud music. The second problem is that music is ALL transients. In real world cases virtually all "standard" cables (even those that are $10,000 a set...) behave one way for the melody line and another for ambient fields that are 25 db quieter than the main instrument. This leads to "Audiophile sound" where the ambient wave is clearly heard as a separate signal. For years this was thought to be a positive aspect of high level systems because it showed their "resolving" power. 
In live music, however, the ambient element is PART OF the main field. It is EXPERIENCED, not HEARD. The Audiophile experience was limited to hearing that the stand up Bass in the trio can be clearly heard that it SHOULD be 15 feet back in the image - because you can hear the ambient wave clearly - even though it is only experienced 5 feet behind the plane of the speakers as a musical experience. Not only is this not realistic, but causes stress as your brain is telling you two different realities about the same sonic event in real time. Graphene Extreme cables allow you to experience the stand up Bass as a consistent sonic event that is 15 feet behind the plane of the speakers as the main signal and its ambient field have identical sonic properties. 
How is the Graphene used? Graphene particles are flooded into each conductor and then the Teflon jacket is heated to shrink the jackets forcing the particles into every minute gap and seam. Where there was a gap of air before between strands in the conductor there is now Graphene! The cable no longer behaves as a semiconductor because there is no air gap any longer. The conductor behaves like a single strand conductor, only it is linear to 4 Gigahertz...We produce the Graphene ourselves in house to control costs. Hope this helped!
BG
Bob Grost, thanks for your input here, very interesting.  I do not see any prices on your website for the various graphene cables and whether you offer a trial audition period?  I, for one, would be interested in auditioning some of your products depending on relative price points.
Interesting stuff. Thanks!

Its so nice to have a vendor actually jump in and help people understand whats going on with their products in these threads rather than leave it mostly up to people’s imagination. I appreciate that!!!!

Currently I use DNM Reson ICs. The more conventional single strand approach there seems to make things sound more "coherent" to me compared to others. I wonder if similar principles at play there, sans Graphene? I tried them initially just to hear what I call a "minimalist" single strand approach would sound like compared to others and no others have weaned me off since.
Mapman, knowledge is what's left after you subtract the stuff you forgot from school.

;-)
@rgrost  Thanks for jumping in Bob I know how busy you are these days! And the Graphene digital was a great addition!