Hi Fi Tuning Supreme fuse-Burn In?


Hello,
I've gone through the Hi Fi Tuning line of fuses starting with their Silver and then on to the Classic Gold.
I recently purchased the the Supreme.
The Supreme does everything I hoped it would but as with anything in this crazy hobby, there's seems to be a trade-off.
I'm getting more clarity and air but the presentation seems to have an edge or sharpness to it.
If everything was just slightly more-should I say organic?-I'd be one happy man.
I have about 60 hours on them.
Will more time smooth things out?
The Gold's are definitely smoother but they lack the air and clarity the Supreme's provide.
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!

greh
This is to. kosst_amojan   Not even 1 purchase, or  sale
and on Audiogon for less then 1 year , and is telling a Veteran as myself 
over 35 year, owning a Audio store  for years, and worked with some of the most 
skilled Audio  engineers in the field .  To come out and belittle someone 
that you yourself have little to No experience or logic is just 
an ignorant statement . My answer on high end fuses  without question 
was Correct .  Look at the top fuses Silver  conductor, or Copper , vs steel 
They are far better conductors and 5x less resistance . And the conductor element blows - Wire melts when exceeding rated amperage which creates 
the short circuit disconnecting power to the circuit . There is the correct answer!!
Take a look here fellow Audiophiles here is the resistance index as I stated 
Silver and Copper top conductor ,look where zinc -steel is located on the chart
this is your fuse conductor element.

http://eddy-current.com/conductivity-of-metals-sorted-by-resistivity/


It appears, just going by what customers have reported, while HiFi Tuning fuses are extremely well made and contain very pure metals and pure solder, even quantum treatments, they are not (rpt not) always at the top of the food chain in terms of sound quality. Bouquet fuse makers all seem to have tricks up their sleeves. Some even build their fuses on a stock fuse, or so it would appear, which flies in the face of the pure metals argument. And bouquet fuses vary how they handle RFI/EMI and vibration. Furthermore, it appears “quality of current” plays some role, too, what with the directionality characteristic that all fuses exhibit.
Audioman58 even if you believe in magical 🧙‍♂️ fuse bs your first post makes no sense. 
You state “just lookup metal  conductor  resistances
the higher number the better, ”
 What you are referring to is conductivity, not resistance.  With resistance it is the opposite, the lower the number the better. 
 In addition if you understand power supplies there are many other problems with your analogy, which he was alluding to but I won’t get into. 
@geoffkait what is a bouquet fuse, is it made from flowers picked from far away lands with clouds of cotton candy and streams running with single malt whiskey?