Clever Little Clock - high-end audio insanity?


Guys, seriously, can someone please explain to me how the Clever Little Clock (http://www.machinadynamica.com/machina41.htm) actually imporves the sound inside the litening room?
audioari1
Zaikesman: now I'm starting to see why the British have the expression, "As mad as a clockwork orange." :-)

GK
Theaudiotweak, no musical instrument I know of has ever been influenced by something I can stick in my pocket. Acoustic grounding of a string instrument through tail pieces, end pins, chin rests of differing designs and materials is another kettle of fish all together. Even modifying instrument resonance by the application internal/external of any material, or altering the composition / shape / etc. . . of any component will alter the sound. . . but putting a 'lucky charm' in your pocket will not be noticeably helpful, even with cryo-treated batteries, that would be dead by definition.
Guidocorona you are a man of science. Yes I know all of the statements you have made above as to musical instruments are factual. I also know by my own observation and that of others present that the wood of the cello under comparitive use had an active memory, while stored could also be erased over a 10 minute period of time. Something I would have never thought possible until I heard it myself. So with that said I am open to other ideas, the possibilty of Scaller waves and Orgone energy. One or both if they truly exist may be at work in the Clock.So I will check it out. Tom
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Theaudiotweak, I believe you about the wood of the cello having a temporary mechanical memory. Yet I do not believe we need to invoke the 4th dymention and the pangalactic sisterhood of Mother Gaya and all living planets quite yet. The poor cello is subjected to considerable mechanical stresses when played, prodded, protected, subjected to pressure, balanced over a nasty end-pin, compressed longitudinally from pegs to tailpiece. . . auch that nasty Yargar C string Forte, all connected to the latest ultra-dense Granadilla tail-piece. Oh but wait, while its toes are being pushed into its nose, that cruel soundpost is trying to burst its belly, simultaneously fighting with the bridge that is trying to bash the very same belly in. And the littlest change in stresses is going to modify the cello's balance of internal tensions. . . quite a feat it can survive being played at all! But the cello is not a 'perfectly elastic' object, being made from wood, a little metal and just a bit of boiled cow bones. . . so the poor thing does remember for a few minutes each time it is brutalized. Can you blame it? Would you behave differently if it were yourself being balanced on a razor-sharp Titanium end-pin, while all trussed up in an unnatural and unspeakable fashion? I would scream for unionization! A little mechanical memory is the least we can expect from the old tramp!