Do speaker cables need a burn in period?


I have heard some say that speaker cables do need a 'burn in', and some say that its totally BS.
What say you?


128x128gawdbless
ganainm
“If your experience suggest things that violate well established scientific norms I would usually suggest to any student to ponder, hard, alternative explanations, other than "oh all that estblished science is wrong". But IF you really have the chops and the data to PROVE that old science wrong, I assure you the Nobel committee is listening. Nobody on this forum has done so, so you mignt look elsewhere for facts on wire and signal transmisson.
Because the OP asked. Many lovely people believe otherwise.”

What well established scientific norms are you talking about? I certainly hope nobody broke any scientific laws. Because if anyone broke Ohm’s law I say we hang him.

”If I could explain it to the average dude they wouldn’t have given me the Nobel prize.”
“What well established scientific norms are you talking about? I certainly hope nobody broke any scientific laws. Because if anyone broke Ohm’s law I say we hang him.”

What?🙀
ganainm
Musician, Physician, EE degree, Ham, Audiophile. No, cables do not have burn in or have directionality. Many things CAN change such as your listening position, air density and your ears and brain. But for those who do believe in wires with magic properties, it is harmless fun. Unless they talk you out of real money. And you get to decide what that is. This is my thought based on experience physics and physiology.

Best Appeal to Authority award of the week. Bravo!
From experience, cables require different amount of burn-in time.  Some of their materials require different times.  I've found that copper wiring takes much less time than silver wiring to burn-in.  Even my phono-cables took a lot time back in 1989 to settle in (maybe 100 hours) despite their small gauge.  My speaker cables took a long time but sounded great as soon as they were plugged in.  My ICs of all sorts take a minimum of 24 hours before I listen to them as their character changes significantly (I'm a cabling beta tester for a manufacturer so I know how raw a cable can sound brand new).  
@tobor007 
If someone gave you a 10 to 1, $ bet that you could pick out the the direction of your cables with a blind listening test, how much money would you risk?
Oh poor 23-post dude (or dudet), go back and read from the beginning.  Nobody can actually hear the difference in a “blind” or “double-blind” listening test.  But, that doesn’t mean there is no difference.  Many can hear a significant difference, just not under the confines of actual comparison tests.  Besides, a requirement to actually hear a difference would suck the fun out of keeping endless logs of listening notes after changing the direction of each and every fuse and cable one-by-one.