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
No2headphones:
Well I am probably not the best one to asked about site conduct since I was just emailed that some of my posts will be deleted  by a moderator.
I get it. Go away ganainm ! No science here! OK I'm gone. We can both poke around for alternatives. DIY Audio does have some folks who know one end of a soldering iron from another but have not been in a while. Good luck....

You will really make me go and buy new speaker cables. You are doing a good job at that.

sooner rather than later.  

bobbyd3
Hey geoffkait,
Since you’re on the Dielectric thingie now, maybe it would help if you knew the Definition if the term?

di·e·lec·tric/ˌdīəˈlektrik/PHYSICSadjectiveadjective: dielectric
1. having the property of transmitting electric force without conduction; insulating.
nounnoun: dielectric; plural noun: dielectrics

1. a medium or substance that transmits electric force without conduction; an insulator.
Capacitors use Dielectric material that blocks DC (Direct Current), and passes Alternating Current (AC), also known as Audio Electrical signals. There IS NO Dielectric material in Copper Speaker Cables, so I really don’t follow your point? But please keep believing all the Bullshit that Cable companies, and Their Advertisers spew to get Suckers to buy there $200/Ft Speaker Cable! “A fool and his money are soon parted”

>>>>>Bobby, you’re pulling my leg, right? Of course copper speaker cables have dielectric material. What planet are you from? Didn’t you read any of the burn in articles I posted? Let me guess, you don’t read explanations because your mind is closed, right?
Bobby only reads explanations without obvious conflict of interest.
Or maybe, just maybe, he’s as inept as you are. Oddly, perhaps, the ones with no conflict of interest do not seem to know anything about it. Just an observation.