Already exists:
But the frequencies are scrambled. Should they be ROYGBIV? - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo (and/or) violet
Already exists:
...Otherwise the cable is very soft and has a great feel.
They also have one using Mogami 2534 quad cable for $10 more. I think you should get both and measure any differences .
I have had experience of burn in of headphone cable. New cable sounds more mellow and soft, could be somewhat pleasing. After burn in, the sound is slightly more direct, transients are more pronounced, overall slightly brighter. I have had consistent result as I had two er4sr two er4xr and another cable from etymotic. All have the same effect.
I have had experience of burn in of headphone cable. New cable sounds more mellow and soft, could be somewhat pleasing. After burn in, the sound is slightly more direct, transients are more pronounced, overall slightly brighter. I have had consistent result as I had two er4sr two er4xr and another cable from etymotic. All have the same effect.
Remember, when something can't be explained by one, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
1, Not double , but blind tested.Did you do this test double-blind under controlled conditions?
What you're describing (cable burn-in) would likely violate known and well-understood laws of physics regarding electrical transmission in a cable. So it's either that, or there is a problem with your experiment. Unless you did an extremely rigorous study, the latter is way, way, way more likely than the former.
No.Is this supposed to be parody?
The sound actually change fastest in the first day(first few hours), but it's fully burnt in in the three days of average use. ...absolutely bullshit. That doesn't happen.
Burning in solder joints is actually a very bad idea. Latest at 360 degree celsius they will just melt away, and of course this has a major influence on the sound. The wire itsself may stand more heat but depending on the kind of insulation material this may also melt, with similar consequences.[..] My guess is, the solder joints can get burnt in, or something funny does happen in connections after burn in. If the wire itself gets burnt in is unknown.
This can be easily, scientifically, and objectively explained. Please reference one of the many ASR threads on how humans hear. It is established science.Remember, when something can't be explained by one, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
There are countless blind listening contests held in China. Analog cable is one of the easiest thing to hear difference........
Thanks. Also for all the clains I did on this forum. Like cable, like digital filters, like amps. The differences are really small to begin with. Whether it's meaningful to take time and effort even money into this is a different question. I wanted to know the reality. I don't think I'm right. But I'm exploring without initial bias, and correct myself if anything is wrong. Tomorrow is the first day of the new semester, so I got a little anxious.With this excision, what you're saying makes far more sense.
The whole science of human hearing so far is established by experiments and trails. Not absolute mathematical proof not brain pulse analysis type of measurements. You should know that it's easy to prove one thing is wrong and hard to prove it's correct using anecdotal/experimental evidence. Similarly, it's an 100% proof of human can hear a thing of a double blind test is done, but it's not concrete to prove one can't hear. There is always a very small chance it's wrong or not accurate.This can be easily, scientifically, and objectively explained. Please reference one of the many ASR threads on how humans hear. It is established science.
If you can find one documented statistically valid blind test proving this....it would be the first.
It is measurable. Then, then people are gonna say, it's measurable on equipment doesn't mean it's audible. It doesn't make a lot of sense to express tbh.The quickness of your reply indicates you did not have time to view the referenced thread.
If cable burn in changes the electrical properties of a signal cable in any way, then that should be easily measured as well. Short of tremendous over-voltage (lightning strikes) it has never been.
Are you saying that the electrical properties of audio cable are also not known?