Fast power cables?


Hi,

I'm looking for recommendations for powerful, fast, power cables to run my Jadis JA100's.
I'm now using Shunyata Python's which work very well but would be interested to try something quicker.

If you don't have experiences with Jadis gear, I'd be also very interested to hear about your experiences with power cables and other amps.

Thanks for your thoughts.
amuseb
There is no doubt that power is critical for good sound. Just look at the extensive efforts that go into designing the power supply in amplifiers. I too am skeptical and have used different power cables to see what all the fuss was about. However this was after I had a dedicated circuit installed. I am honest and I did not here significant changes. It's possible that the PCs I used were not fancy enough but somehow I sincerely doubt it. I used Audience, Cardas, Various Custom made Ferrite shielded numbers from Subaruguru ( I think he left the audio scene) and even Custom made silver PCs.
Hey, all the red necks with the cynical comments, either be funny and smart, which you are far from, or just go look for other threads to be dumb about.
Thanks.
You can try silver power cords. From AES (Audio Engineering Society) copper has a 100% rating, silver is 106.
I run such PC's from "SignalCable", they offer it with Furutech connectors.
06-18-12: Syntax
From AES (Audio Engineering Society) copper has a 100% rating, silver is 106.
To clarify, that refers to the conductivity of each metal, for a given length and a given gauge. Conductivity is inversely proportional to resistance, and is numerically equal to the reciprocal of resistance (i.e., resistance divided into 1).

Resistance increases in direct proportion to the length of the cable, and decreases as the thickness of the conductors in the cable increases. Using a cable that is one gauge size thicker would reduce resistance by a greater amount than changing from copper to silver.

Also, any correlation between power cord resistance or conductance and the perceived "speed" of the sonics produced by the component would be unpredictable and component-dependent, IMO.

Regards,
-- Al