Zaik, you're too much!!!
Yes, you got it right--the fluid damper makes the LPs sound closer to the attributes of CDs. This parragraph wraps it all:
"Dynamic events taking place in different areas of the soundstage had less of an effect on one another, permitting the instruments to go about their business without smearing or the imposition of added harshness as compared to before. The result, prehaps paradoxically, was to make gains for my analog reproduction resembling some of the more favorable attributes of CD, for aspects such as separation and contrast, while at the same time actually adding liquidity through the removal of intermodulation. Decays, not the onsets, of transients were the big winners with the damper in place, exhibiting a newfound cleanliness and precision that allowed me follow the flow the music with less guesswork. Image focus became more crystalline-pure and unwaveringly stable, less prone to fluctuate with attacks and crescendos. Although I'm not big on the concept of 'pace', I would actually say that, if anything, the music now seemed to move along at a slightly brisker clip, unencumbered by the dragging disturbance of throwing a larger wake in its trail."
And *that* it's why the damper makes things 'slow down'...there's sooo much music now it seems to warp time!!!
I didn't want to tell you this benefit, for fear of you stigmatizing me as a nut.
Glad you liked it. I think you listened to it too clinically--like a reviewer. Next time get a hold of your favorite "beverage" and/or smokes, relax and enjoy!!!
Get a hold of some funky salsa records...
Adding the Bob Regal foot next to the tonearm gimbal brings more improvement on the bass than the damper, BTW.
Yes, you got it right--the fluid damper makes the LPs sound closer to the attributes of CDs. This parragraph wraps it all:
"Dynamic events taking place in different areas of the soundstage had less of an effect on one another, permitting the instruments to go about their business without smearing or the imposition of added harshness as compared to before. The result, prehaps paradoxically, was to make gains for my analog reproduction resembling some of the more favorable attributes of CD, for aspects such as separation and contrast, while at the same time actually adding liquidity through the removal of intermodulation. Decays, not the onsets, of transients were the big winners with the damper in place, exhibiting a newfound cleanliness and precision that allowed me follow the flow the music with less guesswork. Image focus became more crystalline-pure and unwaveringly stable, less prone to fluctuate with attacks and crescendos. Although I'm not big on the concept of 'pace', I would actually say that, if anything, the music now seemed to move along at a slightly brisker clip, unencumbered by the dragging disturbance of throwing a larger wake in its trail."
And *that* it's why the damper makes things 'slow down'...there's sooo much music now it seems to warp time!!!
I didn't want to tell you this benefit, for fear of you stigmatizing me as a nut.
Glad you liked it. I think you listened to it too clinically--like a reviewer. Next time get a hold of your favorite "beverage" and/or smokes, relax and enjoy!!!
Get a hold of some funky salsa records...
Adding the Bob Regal foot next to the tonearm gimbal brings more improvement on the bass than the damper, BTW.