Trying to find someone with a cable cooker in Metro NY


Hello to all...

Have recently been 'exposed' to the concept of cable cooking to improve performance, but would like to pay someone who has one, to do it to my interconnects and speaker cables, each for a 3 day (72 hr) treatment... Would be nice if you are in the Metro NY area, but would be willing to ship to you if out of area.

Would also like to hear from someone with comparative experience (geoffkait?) in using this and/or cryogenic treatment: if results are different, one more effective than the other,  one more lasting than the other, must treatment be redone periodically?

Please relate real-life info ( don't be a second level whistleblower, passing relayed to you experiences...).

Best Wishes to all.
insearchofprat
Getting back abit closer to topic: homemade speaker cable of 12g solid core copper wire, simply twisted, is now out of the 'refrigerator' and lying straightened out on the floor in the stereo room, resting (along with the short lengths to be used as jumpers)... After I put the "treated" speaker cables and jumpers into the stereo system, I will repeat the "freezer" treatment for the other pair of speaker cables I have been using ( so I can compare system with jumpers vs true bi-wired...)
What are you expecting to change or improve through the  "freezer" treatment?
Cold and cryogenic treatment has been shown to improve the conductivity of copper but even "cold" treatment is typically considered less than -150 degrees F, and cryo treatment at least -310 degrees F or lower.  I cannot find any support (outside of audiophile forums) that any length of time in a residential freezer would change the crystal structure, electrical conductivity, or any other metallurgical property  of copper whatsoever.
" How much is Klipsch paying you to go to this school? "
  What this is is a way for the Klipsch Museum in Hope to raise money. The Klipsch museum is run by volunteers and is self supporting through memberships and special events. Roy Delgado current chief Klipsch engineer who learned much from Paul Klipsch and worked with him for years agreed to teach up to 50 people for two days and the money goes to the museum. Roy does not do this often with the last time being some years ago around when the Jubilees got released.  So in a nutshell I pay them to go and get to support the museum and learn from one of the true masters of Audio. Plus it is a gathering of serious hands on people so they also share knowledge. Every attendee on the list so far has serious cinema gear for their home theaters or builds speakers or both and every name on the list I know does build. This is of particular interest to me since I currently manufacture a set of machined aluminum replacement tweeter lenses for two types of Klipsch speaker tweeters and I am working on my first complete speaker build with the intent to sell them also.
As a side topic, I would love to hear a well set-up Klipsch LaScala or Klipschorn (or maybe better yet a restored/upgraded Altec VOTT or similar) played through a nice medium-powered tube amplifier.  I believe I may have taken the wrong path 20 years ago by not starting out with a pair of high efficiency Klipsch speakers.  The whole amplifier thing would have been so much easier by not needing high power and I suspect the dynamics and life-like realism of live music would have been easier to approximate in my home.  I am currently having a pair of SOTA 600 wpc +/- amps built for me so I am too far down the road to switch to horns now, but if I were starting over.....