Well, I've got you beat by several years. I responded to you because you made it personal and attacked me and another member.
As I said, spend your money as foolishly as you wish...
QSA Stones
I have had 6 QSA Stones on top of my power conditioner (2 each of red blue and clear) for about three months, and have really enjoyed what they bring to my system. This week, I got another set of 6.
One thing I have learned over many years in this hobby is the importance of power supplies, and the impact they have on the sound of individual components and systems. A number of audiophiles with DIY skills upgrade the power supplies on components with bigger and/or better capacitors, and in various other ways. Unfortunately, I lack the skills to do this.
I ended up placing the new stones on top of the power supplies of my CD transport and amp (1 red, blue and clear on each). To me the very positive results sound similar to upgrading the power supplies, without all the hassle of soldering etc. Particularly with my amp, there was an increased sense of ease and musical flow, along with more solidity and authority.
I don’t claim to have any real explanation as to how the QSA stones work, but it seems to have something to do with their interaction with electromagnetic fields, such as those around power transformers. Fortunately, I don’t need an explanation to enjoy the results🙂
@coralkong What do you care how much money I spend on and what I choose to try/buy? I don't think the primary issue is money - I now consider that to be something of a deflection. To some the issue is about the ethics of making claims that cannot be substantiated in any objective manner. This of course is applicable in many areas of our day to day living in a civilized society. Please elaborate on exactly what it means to be a flat-earther. |
noske To some the issue is about the ethics of making claims that cannot be substantiated in any objective manner.This is a hobbyist's group, not a scientific forum. No one here owes anyone scientific proof of anything. If that's an "issue" for you, you may be in the wrong place. |
I’m always surprised by the claims made by occult tweaker products. I use the word "occult" because these products make big claims but always supply small to zero evidence to justify them. They’ll always tell you what you should "expect" to hear when you try them-- and that is part of the success of occult products-- the power of suggestion. You project differences that you think you hear onto the product-- often just cheap crap like rocks, paint, or "black box" specials. Saying rocks will make your system sound better because of some special "ju ju" that no can even begin to explain and back up with any credible evidence is the seed they plant in your mind-- then your mind does the rest. The "eye witness" theory-- as in, "I heard it so it must be so" is meaningless. Courts understand that even eyewitnesses are often very unreliable-- as memories can be altered just by thinking about them. All that said, if you take a pill and feel better, it can be the pill, or it can be the placebo effect-- something very real but not very well understood. That effect is probably more real than the magical benefits of $80 rocks that cost very little and do even less-- other that to perhaps decrease some vibrations-- something most non-magical rocks can also do quite well. As an aside-- those rocks look like crap for $80 apiece. If you’re going to rip people off selling dressed up rocks, at least slap a decent looking sticker on them and paint them a pretty color so that they don’t look like cow-sh!t yeah? |