Experiment: Take one wellseasoned audiophile put him in a dark room tell him to put in order of preference 3 copper cables a $1000 , a $2000 and a Home Depot Monster Copper Cable @ FIFTY-THREE CENTS/FT.!! speaker cables. System is Audio Aero Capitole Jadis 100 mono +preamp Sound Lab A1's. Play 1 classical 1 rock and 1 jazz high quality recording. So he has 3 chances to get it right. Do the same with interconnects using the top of the line Radio Shack inters with 2 other high priced inters , all 3 copper or heck use 2 silver. The dark room is used because we want to let hearing come fully alive. If he errs significantly then maybe it's ALL HYPE about these super-duper "Forged in the Fires of Mt. Mordor" cables. If we took this "zero crystal copper" and compare it to the top of the line Radio Shack would the microscope reveal the inferiority of RS's copper? If not then HOW can they sound better? Last night i bought 20 feet! of Monster Wire (the copper strand on each current is about half thick as a pencil , awesome) at home depot for TEN DOLLARS!!! ...This old speaker has its limitations can't see how any other wire gonna do any better. The weak link is the NAD cdp i bought 6 months ago(pre-audiogon days) and time to retire my 20 year old Philips 2 way not wires. The previous posts in this thread brought tears to my eyes i was laughing so hard. Great Thread!
7500 for USED cables? Are they joking?
I've been out of high-end audio for about 8 years, and the thing I am most struck by on my return is the apparent acceptance of power cables, interconnects and speaker cables that cost as much or more than heavy-duty high-end components.
As a now-outsider of sorts, this really looks like the Emperor's New Clothes big-time. Especially power cords, considering the Romex that delivers the A/C to the outlet isn't exactly audiophile quality.
Are people really paying $500 and up for wire? Is this foolishness of the highest order, or is this what people now believe it takes to extract the last percent or two of definition from their components?
What happened? Even buyers of what are now considered "modestly priced" cables would be laughed out of the professional audio world, so why do audiophiles think they need something better than was used to make the original recording? MOST professional recording engineers scoff at the difference between microphone cables that cost $19.95 vs. those that cost $49.95 -- most anything higher is rarely considered at all (the most expensive microphone cable might be $125 for a 20 foot run, and it's laughed at by most of the pros).
I'm not criticizing -- I'm too stunned to draw any conclusions -- I just wondered if anyone has given this much thought.
(At least I understand the home theater revolution -- thank heavens something came along to save the high end manufacturers, although it makes me chuckle to think of someone spending $30,000 to watch the Terminator. It's OK with me.)
Thank you for your consideration,
Mark Hubbard
Eureka, CA
As a now-outsider of sorts, this really looks like the Emperor's New Clothes big-time. Especially power cords, considering the Romex that delivers the A/C to the outlet isn't exactly audiophile quality.
Are people really paying $500 and up for wire? Is this foolishness of the highest order, or is this what people now believe it takes to extract the last percent or two of definition from their components?
What happened? Even buyers of what are now considered "modestly priced" cables would be laughed out of the professional audio world, so why do audiophiles think they need something better than was used to make the original recording? MOST professional recording engineers scoff at the difference between microphone cables that cost $19.95 vs. those that cost $49.95 -- most anything higher is rarely considered at all (the most expensive microphone cable might be $125 for a 20 foot run, and it's laughed at by most of the pros).
I'm not criticizing -- I'm too stunned to draw any conclusions -- I just wondered if anyone has given this much thought.
(At least I understand the home theater revolution -- thank heavens something came along to save the high end manufacturers, although it makes me chuckle to think of someone spending $30,000 to watch the Terminator. It's OK with me.)
Thank you for your consideration,
Mark Hubbard
Eureka, CA
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- 111 posts total
- 111 posts total