Speaker cabels for dark sounding speakers?


Hej

My speakers are considered to be dark sounding and it has been OK with me until I replaced my easy chair with a small couch. Now the sound has turned a little too dark/muffled/dead. So I'm thinking maybe if I replaced my speaker cables with some other. Yes, I know it's a long shot, especially when my current cables are Kimber 8TC. But what do you say? Smaller carpet? Just don't say bring back the easy chair or buy new speakers :)
simna

Please don't start a war over my question.

Yes,I've tried the treble energy settings and yes it made the sound a little bit brighter.

The system: Audiolab 6000CDT transport > Audioquest Carbon Coax Digital Cable > LAB12 DAC1 SE > Kimber KS1016 > Audion Audio Sterling Plus power amp > Kimber 8TC > Tannoy Eaton speakers. I did’t bother with the turntable stuff.

But I'm not clever enough to see what that has to do with the changed sound after changing a easy chair with a sofa.

Anyway; as I wrote before, I'll move the carpet so the parquet floor will be be more exposed and see how that affects the sound. Maybe it's the shorter reverberation that's bothering me. Probably is it so.
And if I get the chance, I'll test silver cables to see what I think about that. Anyway.

It's probably your sitting position changing. I bought a new couch and cut 2 inches off my speaker stands to get them aligned better with my ears. 
While you are at it, may want to borrow a solid state amp and give it a try.

I think I am looking at the right impedance curve in which case with that amplifier, you may get get an elevated bass response which will make the highs seems dark.
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Whether Nelson pass has an EE or not, he understand engineering and he would not use silver wire to tune the sound of his amplifiers. He does appear to be a good businessman so perhaps he would include it to sucker in the gullible, but he does not seem the type.

No, Nelson pass uses REAL ENGINEERING to tailor the sound of his amplifiers, not made up engineering and science. He will be the first to admit he tailors the real (not perceived) characteristics of his amplifiers.

The Op, can go to a doctor when he is seriously sick, or he can go to a faith healer.  Room acoustics, interactions of a particular tube amp and a speaker, listening and speaker positions, that is real medicine.  Silver plated cables is the audio equivalent of a faith healer.


What a weird rant about EE's.  Believe it or not, most major audio companies employ lots of EE's, some of them quite good actually.  Of course, you are likely to find better EE's designing audio stuff at Bose, or Harmon, or Sonos than you are at most boutique audio companies.  If you are smart enough to be a good EE, and you are still an EE, then you probably are not in it for the money anyway.  If it was about money, you would have been a doctor or lawyer or investment banker.


p.s. "Sound engineering" has absolutely nothing to do with electrical engineering. It is not even what most would call engineering, so again weird rant.  Of course, many do quite well working in the acoustics field.

So back to this Nelson Pass, thing. The engineers you have never heard of design the vast majority of the audio products bought today whether by dollars or by units. High end is but a small subset.