Wrapping power cords and interconnects with copper foil.


Ok..not sure other people have done what I tried recently but I’ve found a night and day difference in sound quality after I wrapped my tube power amp power cord (rogue Zeus) and my cheap audio quest interconnect cables with copper foil. I even wrapped by phono cable coming out of my turntable to phono pre-amp. The detail retrieval and pin drop silence after doing this has made by jaw drop. Cost was $40 worth of foil wrap. What do you audiophiles think? Have I changed the sound signature in a negative way somehow? 

tubelvr1

If i was sensitive to laughing and mockery i would never had created my own system/room by experiments  which put me now  in ecstasy at peanuts costs...

I would had given 50,000 dollars( i dont have) for that and called it audio done...

And human nature being human nature i could be here mocking my own ghost because he insist too much on the fundamental and only way to improve any system at any price : mechanical,electrical and especially acoustical devices controls of the room/system...Not upgrade first and last but optimal means of controls.

Not sleepwalking consumers buying power but basic knowledge in acoustics and other basic tools.

cool

Thanks!!! for possible great idea to resolve a similar issue. I was considering aluminum foil.
When we added two Dolby Atmos "height" speakers to our theater system we got not so loud, but annoying, 60Hz hum from the height speakers.

At first I blamed the AudioSource AMP210VS 2-channel amp bought from Crutchfield to power them. Who wants to pay for greater than 100dB below your program to hear a hum that is 60dB? The amp requires single-end RCA connections to pre-processor, so I tried a few decent cables.

Finally... my wife simply moved -- an inch or two--the multiple 120VAC power cables routed from surge protectors and APS from the audio cables: Hum GONE... inaudible! We could tweak attenuation of the hum in real time. 

Later experiments revealed just a couple centimeters or orientation of the 120VAC power cables relative to the RCA or XLR cables made a world of difference! 

Hope this helps... We really appreciate Audiogon posts that enhance our system. 

@joelepo Yes, good practice is to keep power cables away from audio and data cables, as far as practical.  If they have to coexist, try to cross them at right angles or thereabouts.

@richardbrand Agree that right angled cables minimize transfer of electromagnetic signal... Parallel cables promote transfer, much as transformer or RF coils are wound in parallel with each other. 

But... for the whole group.... do want to remark the following: Copper or aluminum shielding is NOT a “snake oil” fix— as some have posted— but rather is based on established principles of physics. Shielding of audio cables from electromagnetic applies function of a "Faraday Cage," which creates a barrier between the internal components of a device and the external electric fields.

@joelepo Agree on the physics of the Faraday cage, which is based on the repulsion between electrons forcing them to the outside of the cage, thereby isolating the inside from external electrical interference.  Mind you, nobody knows what an electron really is.  Richard Feynman, who came closer than most, notes that every electron interacts with every other electron in the universe.

Magnetism is something else again!

Consider this for power cables: the RFI may be injected by your component and is not necessarily from the mains supply or from the 'ether'.  I have a KEF subwoofer with a class D amplifier built in which totally destroyed my weak digital TV signals until I popped a couple of cheap ferrite chokes over the power cable, which had been acting as an antenna radiating RFI into the 'ether'.

We now know, thanks to the greatest failed physics experiment, that the 'ether' does not exist and as a consequence space-time is relative ... another story.