EarlessOldMan
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- Apr 11, 2022
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I won't buy his cables until he exorcises the demons from them.
Maybe he cryowashed it?He’s come a long way since the ‘dirty t-shirt’ .
Pffft! It is obviously cry-dyed. That aligns and preserves the crystal lattice of the fibers. Duh!Maybe he cryowashed it?
Oh lord. When you thought it couldn’t get any worse.…Hold on to your hats folks! Danny has now cranked up his cryo freezer chamber:
View attachment 319756
The result, according to Danny, is of course much better cables.
Plus he demagnetizes them. Watch from 2:00 into the video:
I know, it's totally crazy.Oh lord. When you thought it couldn’t get any worse.…
If you place the power wires on your ears, you'll easily hear the difference his power cords make.don’t forget the blackest backgrounds you’ll ever not heat
Do the crystals give the cable the strength needed to do some heavy veil-lifting?I really don’t know what he’s thinking crying treatment is so 2019… 2023 will the the year of high temperature annealing! It yields a much more stable crystalline structure and gives much smoother sound. And don’t forget the blackest backgrounds you’ll ever not heat!
Yes. It is used to treat metals to remove slight imperfections in the surface to obtain better wear characteristics as told to me by a metallurgist. Probably, this is where the audiophile myth originates. Like all of them, a seed of truth is planted and cultivated via the waters of ignorance into a tree of stupidityAlthough cryo-treatment for cables doesn't do anything for audio, there ARE some instances where cryo-treatment provides some benefit. I would think that automotive items like some engine or suspension parts might exhibit increased strength, toughness or resilience after such treatment. Maybe something like the shaft of a golf club could benefit- maybe even metal eyeglass frames - bicycle frames or wheels- fine quality knives - certain mechanical items like these could benefit. Maybe.
But not HiFi cables or other parts of the system, except MAYBE phono pickup cantilever tubes. Again a big maybe.
Now, that is not to say that cryo-treatment is completely useless in audio. I understand that placing audiophiles who are "believers" when it comes to wire in a bath of liquid nitrogen that the background noise in any listening room where they are present decreases markedly....
Talk about chilling outI understand that placing audiophiles who are "believers" when it comes to wire in a bath of liquid nitrogen
Although cryo-treatment for cables doesn't do anything for audio, there ARE some instances where cryo-treatment provides some benefit. I would think that automotive items like some engine or suspension parts might exhibit increased strength, toughness or resilience after such treatment.
If, a big IF, now phono pickup cantilever tubes would be affected by cryo freezing, how do you know that pickup X is affected in the same way as pickup Y when they are frozen and then thawed? Sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse when cryo is done, or? Would pickup X be better, or worse, if it underwent multiple cryo freezes?Although cryo-treatment for cables doesn't do anything for audio, there ARE some instances where cryo-treatment provides some benefit. I would think that automotive items like some engine or suspension parts might exhibit increased strength, toughness or resilience after such treatment. Maybe something like the shaft of a golf club could benefit- maybe even metal eyeglass frames - bicycle frames or wheels- fine quality knives - certain mechanical items like these could benefit. Maybe.
But not HiFi cables or other parts of the system, except MAYBE phono pickup cantilever tubes. Again a big maybe.
Now, that is not to say that cryo-treatment is completely useless in audio. I understand that placing audiophiles who are "believers" when it comes to wire in a bath of liquid nitrogen that the background noise in any listening room where they are present decreases markedly....
Yes, after a very short transient peak.Although cryo-treatment for cables doesn't do anything for audio, there ARE some instances where cryo-treatment provides some benefit. I would think that automotive items like some engine or suspension parts might exhibit increased strength, toughness or resilience after such treatment. Maybe something like the shaft of a golf club could benefit- maybe even metal eyeglass frames - bicycle frames or wheels- fine quality knives - certain mechanical items like these could benefit. Maybe.
But not HiFi cables or other parts of the system, except MAYBE phono pickup cantilever tubes. Again a big maybe.
Now, that is not to say that cryo-treatment is completely useless in audio. I understand that placing audiophiles who are "believers" when it comes to wire in a bath of liquid nitrogen that the background noise in any listening room where they are present decreases markedly....
Isn’t that what you start with when maken liquor ? Well at least then you apparently can reverse the processKind of like non-alcoholic liquor. Once it is done, you just have flavored sugar water left.
Pruno! Made in plastic bags hidden by prisoners in their cells. Anything fermentable goes, and yeast is what is in the air and its spores land in the open bag. As for liquor, the process can't go backwards because it gets consumed. Pruno did have some sharp corners on it when going down, however.Isn’t that what you start with when maken liquor ? Well at least then you apparently can reverse the process