Actually, some manufacturers do burn in their cables.
I do.
However, there is no precise and scientific basis that has yet been determined for what (if anything) is actually happening. My ears tell me something is happening.
Even after saying that, it seems that sometimes merely shipping the cables appears to "negate" the effects of the break-in process. One mfr I know has told me that he has changed his packaging and this seems to have negated the negation of the shipping process.
Keep in mind that today shipping can mean exposure to extreme cold, heat, x-rays, cosmic radiation, RF energy and magnetic fields.
Why any of this should effect the sound coming through wires is still very unclear - indeed some deny that it happens at all.
But, I do burn in all the cables that I ship and have found that cables auditioned here, virgin vs. burned-in do sound rather different (although in reality this is a subtle difference, best heard on a system that is very clean and neutral) but audibly so.
_-_-bear
I do.
However, there is no precise and scientific basis that has yet been determined for what (if anything) is actually happening. My ears tell me something is happening.
Even after saying that, it seems that sometimes merely shipping the cables appears to "negate" the effects of the break-in process. One mfr I know has told me that he has changed his packaging and this seems to have negated the negation of the shipping process.
Keep in mind that today shipping can mean exposure to extreme cold, heat, x-rays, cosmic radiation, RF energy and magnetic fields.
Why any of this should effect the sound coming through wires is still very unclear - indeed some deny that it happens at all.
But, I do burn in all the cables that I ship and have found that cables auditioned here, virgin vs. burned-in do sound rather different (although in reality this is a subtle difference, best heard on a system that is very clean and neutral) but audibly so.
_-_-bear