What does a Hexfred do?


I've seen some threads here, as well as some advertisements touting the benefits of Hexfred diodes in the power supply. Upscale Audio seems to think they're useful in the power supply of the Cary SLI 80. I'm always contemplating tweaks for my Cary V12, so I thought I'd ask: What do Hexfreds do, is there any sonic benefit, and if so, what is it?

Thanks!
grimace
Amps using Silicon diodes can sound harsh and
brittle because the diodes are slower in response than a tube rectifier(they're so nice). By replacing the diodes with FREDs or Schottkys your amp
will have a smoother/sweeter top end, more detailed tone definition and be a touch more responsive. FRED’s are
much faster than the cheaper diodes that most amp manufactures use. Although they seem kind of simple, rectifiers are not well understood from an RF-emission standpoint. If you think
of them as really crude Class B (not Class AB!) high-power output stages, the mental picture will get clearer.
The rectifiers commutate the AC waveform just like a fast mechanical switch, and like a mechanical switch, the
zero-crossing region is not dealt with cleanly. Conventional silicon diodes actually knock a hole out of the
waveform thanks to charge-storage effects. Fast/soft recovery diodes(or zero recovery SIC Schottkys) do a much smoother/quieter job of it. It would be nice if the power supply filter caps in your amp could rid the DC output of all of the garbage created, but they don't.
BTW: There are manufacturers that appreciate the diffs that better rectifiers provide. ie: Note the upgrades that are available from Rogue(http://www.rogueaudio.com/The_Magnum_Series.htm)