Yay! So there is a circuit. Like I said. Only for some reason me saying it triggers terminal butt-hurt, the cry-bully has the post removed. I try to not get in his head, but somehow keep getting sucked in. Must be the vacuum?
Can an unused cable break in?
I bought a new $300 Audioquest cable about a month ago, hoping to improve the sound of my Cyrus CD transport. It didn't improve the SQ even after a little break-in period. I compared it to another transport system I had and it was quite inferior. So I stopped using the Cyrus but left it plugged in the wall for the month.
Lo and behold, I compared the two transports today and there was virtually no difference in sound between the two of them.
I’m listening to the Cyrus right now and am thrilled with it.
Either it’s my imagination, or the cable broke in while unused! The difference isn’t subtle.
Is such a thing possible?
Lo and behold, I compared the two transports today and there was virtually no difference in sound between the two of them.
I’m listening to the Cyrus right now and am thrilled with it.
Either it’s my imagination, or the cable broke in while unused! The difference isn’t subtle.
Is such a thing possible?
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- 40 posts total
rodman999995,056 posts I would never use it to verify the circuit is de-energized if you are going to work on the circuit. FWIW, the no contact voltage tester isn’t really connected between the hot and neutral or EGC, or any reference grounded object, of the circuit. There is not an actual connection from the source Hot wire and a return through the human body back to the source. Without a closed circuit path how could there possibly be an electric charge flow, current. . |
@jea48 - " I would never use it to verify the circuit is de-energized if you are going to work on the circuit." Never have. Always figured: that's what my Fluke DMM was for. My first DMM was an 8020B, if you remember those. Bought that for my speaker/electronics shoppe, in the early Eighties. Most of what I've done in electrical (on and off/here and there/during a hard times) was industrial, 480-600V, Three Phase, in industrial machine (wire pulling) and plating environment (a fall-back, for me). Lots of electronics, in the control systems, too (my primary forte). Of course: If you've ever been around industrial plating equipment, you know about those rather large, 5mW, SCR Rectifiers. Some of that stuff can bite ya, pretty good! |
- 40 posts total