Sorry to bring back an old thread, but I recently acquired a pair of the rocket 44 in a 7’ biwire arrangement. Initially they sounded very good but quickly(within a few hours of play time) became kind of dull with little detail.
To which one would ask, why would a company design cables to sound like this? And the answer is, they don’t. The cables need to be broken in!! I now have about 27 hours on them and using the same speakers, same music, same room and same volume levels, the highs are back and detail giving an airy sound stage.
The difference is striking, and all it took was running the system for a few hours a day for a week. I checked the audioquest site, and they suggest it may take about 200 hours to fully break in. This is about half of what Morrow Audios cables take to break in, but it does take time.
Break in is real, if you have a decent system you owe it to yourself to get the best sound out of it.
To which one would ask, why would a company design cables to sound like this? And the answer is, they don’t. The cables need to be broken in!! I now have about 27 hours on them and using the same speakers, same music, same room and same volume levels, the highs are back and detail giving an airy sound stage.
The difference is striking, and all it took was running the system for a few hours a day for a week. I checked the audioquest site, and they suggest it may take about 200 hours to fully break in. This is about half of what Morrow Audios cables take to break in, but it does take time.
Break in is real, if you have a decent system you owe it to yourself to get the best sound out of it.