Thank you Geoff for the public service announcement on the number of fuses available. I have to say the Brimar fuses are new to me and I was interested to see they utilize "48 hours of Telos Quantum Cooking." Are they smoking them over low heat? Are they smoking something?
I suspect the Brimar people have paid Telos to cook their fuses since it seems Telos is a company from Taiwan that makes a bunch of quantum stuff, including their own fuses (thanks for the tip Geoff). They make so much quantum stuff they have their own "Telos Quantum Technique" as well as a "Telos Quantum X2 Technique."
They make a cool Quantum Magnetic Tuning Device which sort of looks like a bulls-eye on a circuit board. It is said to "improve any existing audio system" which opens the product up to a vast ocean of potential purchasers.
Another super-cool thing they make is a sheet of really small round stickers with adhesive backing that you can apply to just about anything in your audio system, if you want to "experience the advantage of the Quantum X2 technology." In addition to the cool red color and snazzy ATOM Symbol U+269B (modified with a "t" in the middle for Telos), the description uses a lot of tweaky scientific words and phrases like "far-infrared" and more. Far-infrared is also a heating technology that is used in expensive infrared saunas using low watt density ceramic emitters which emit relatively low temperature long wave infrared radiation.
If you don't want a ceramic heater, you can purchase the stickers for only $100 for a sheet of 20 stickers, which seems like a bargain.
I suspect the Brimar people have paid Telos to cook their fuses since it seems Telos is a company from Taiwan that makes a bunch of quantum stuff, including their own fuses (thanks for the tip Geoff). They make so much quantum stuff they have their own "Telos Quantum Technique" as well as a "Telos Quantum X2 Technique."
They make a cool Quantum Magnetic Tuning Device which sort of looks like a bulls-eye on a circuit board. It is said to "improve any existing audio system" which opens the product up to a vast ocean of potential purchasers.
Another super-cool thing they make is a sheet of really small round stickers with adhesive backing that you can apply to just about anything in your audio system, if you want to "experience the advantage of the Quantum X2 technology." In addition to the cool red color and snazzy ATOM Symbol U+269B (modified with a "t" in the middle for Telos), the description uses a lot of tweaky scientific words and phrases like "far-infrared" and more. Far-infrared is also a heating technology that is used in expensive infrared saunas using low watt density ceramic emitters which emit relatively low temperature long wave infrared radiation.
If you don't want a ceramic heater, you can purchase the stickers for only $100 for a sheet of 20 stickers, which seems like a bargain.