I would suggest you do the cable dance( like the middle eastern snake dance). Make sure and rub it in all your cracks. The one way OFC copper (OFC means “only for catholics”) needs to bond with molecules in your brain. That’s why they aren’t smooth sounding yet. If you’re not Catholic, they’ll get much smoother if you find a Catholic and rub the cables in their cracks and sometimes this helps. There’s nothing harder than re-breaking in a cable. They get set in their ways and after you put them in the box and roll them up they get used to being retired from working and they get lazy. Once you take them out of the box you could also try to whip them back into shape and tell them it’s time to go back to work. I often hit mine with a flyswatter and sometimes that will help wake him up. Don’t be afraid of them, let them know who’s the boss. If they don’t wake up and respond tell them you’re going to use them to hook up your electric dryer and run some serious voltage through them. If that doesn’t wake them up nothing will. Sometimes use cables just don’t burn in again.
Burn-In with Preowned Transparent Speaker Cables?
Hi, a question about your experiences with preowned cables ...
I just acquired a pair of Transparent Gen 5 Super speaker cables, pre-owned. I do not know the hours of usage, but they came out of recent use in another owner's system. I am using them to replace a pair of Kimber 8TC I have used for years on various speaker systems. After a few hours use, I hear the Transparents as being big, bold, and dynamic, with stronger bass, and a nice ability to place individual instruments very distinctly across the image. But I also hear them as being significantly less musical, fairly uneven in perceived frequency response (no measurements here), and not having a really smooth spatial image. I am fairly stunned, because they are generally not smooth and somewhat hard to listen to.
So my question is this ... should I expect that Transparent cables require a significant breaking period to even out their sound? Are these common break-in characteristics for these cables, even though previously used? Any other ideas?
The cables are being used with a Burmester 911 amp and Wilson Sasha 2 speakers. I have verified cable hookup polarity and direction.
Thank you sharing your thoughts.
I just acquired a pair of Transparent Gen 5 Super speaker cables, pre-owned. I do not know the hours of usage, but they came out of recent use in another owner's system. I am using them to replace a pair of Kimber 8TC I have used for years on various speaker systems. After a few hours use, I hear the Transparents as being big, bold, and dynamic, with stronger bass, and a nice ability to place individual instruments very distinctly across the image. But I also hear them as being significantly less musical, fairly uneven in perceived frequency response (no measurements here), and not having a really smooth spatial image. I am fairly stunned, because they are generally not smooth and somewhat hard to listen to.
So my question is this ... should I expect that Transparent cables require a significant breaking period to even out their sound? Are these common break-in characteristics for these cables, even though previously used? Any other ideas?
The cables are being used with a Burmester 911 amp and Wilson Sasha 2 speakers. I have verified cable hookup polarity and direction.
Thank you sharing your thoughts.
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- 7 posts total
- 7 posts total