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Post by indiehouse on Nov 19, 2014 19:20:59 GMT -6
So, I've got a new monitoring system (Amphion One18 w/ Amphion100 amp) and it's just dynamite. Like, really good. The package came with $350 speaker cables. I have the option to pass on them or keep them.
I understand this is somewhat of a contested issue. Some guys believe, some guys don't. Looking for advice from those in the know.
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Post by svart on Nov 19, 2014 21:26:54 GMT -6
Cables are like just about anything else. Cheap ones are bad, but there is definitely a point of diminishing returns for cost vs. performance. A good high strand count oxygen free copper cable is about as good as you can get, or go solid. Anything else is just marketing or boasting. I'd pass on the 350$ ones.
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 19, 2014 22:03:23 GMT -6
Svart's right about diminishing returns. For those with kilobuck budgets, perhaps that last little bit of improvement means everything, for some, it doesn't matter. Now, indiehouse, I gotta tell you when you say "I understand this is somewhat of a contested issue. Some guys believe, some guys don't", I've found this particular topic to be the biggest can of worms I've ever seen opened since the internet began, and I'm honestly not exaggerating. Long stories short, I've learned to trust my ears.For more than five years, I used to beta test high end cables for some manufacturers back in my audiophile days. These cables averaged from $99 to $2,500 each. Here's the bottom line, cables do make a difference, no matter how many pseudo scientists want to explain to you why it's all in your mind or blind test you to death, they sound different. What I ended up doing was looking for the best value, and found that buying second hand was a good idea, because some people like to change brands a lot, and cables don't wear out that easily. I'd used to find things like a $350 power cord for $150, to give you an idea. Recently, a friend who's the senior editor of the major audiophile magazine sent me two power cords. I did him a small favor, needed a power cord, and he had these lying around. I tried them both, and could clearly hear an improvement from one to the other. It turned out that one cable had been sold retail for $250, the other one, $2,000. Now, I'm a trust my ears guy, remember, so I'd love to say the $250 one was better, but in this case, it wasn't. Still I didn't have a clue as to their value, and they both looked fat, well made and mighty pricey, so the choice I made was from the sound I liked, not the price tag influencing me. As for your speaker cables, what brand are they? Do not, I repeat, do not buy Monster cables. They're like Bose, a brand known to those who know little. Look for the lower end of these high end brands, that's where the bang for the buck lies, just before that point of diminishing returns Svart mentioned. In this order: Acoustic Zen, Harmonic Technology, Analysis Plus Oval 8's, Synergistic Research, Transparent Audio, Cardas, Kimber Kable, Audioquest here: app.audiogon.com/listings?utf8=✓&global_search_text=speaker+cablesI promise to bow out as soon as the rockets start firing here, so good luck !
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 19, 2014 23:08:25 GMT -6
Svart's right about diminishing returns. For those with kilobuck budgets, perhaps that last little bit of improvement means everything, for some, it doesn't matter. Now, indiehouse, I gotta tell you when you say "I understand this is somewhat of a contested issue. Some guys believe, some guys don't", I've found this particular topic to be the biggest can of worms I've ever seen opened since the internet began, and I'm honestly not exaggerating. Long stories short, I've learned to trust my ears.For more than five years, I used to beta test high end cables for some manufacturers back in my audiophile days. These cables averaged from $99 to $2,500 each. Here's the bottom line, cables do make a difference, no matter how many pseudo scientists want to explain to you why it's all in your mind or blind test you to death, they sound different. What I ended up doing was looking for the best value, and found that buying second hand was a good idea, because some people like to change brands a lot, and cables don't wear out that easily. I'd used to find things like a $350 power cord for $150, to give you an idea. Recently, a friend who's the senior editor of the major audiophile magazine sent me two power cords. I did him a small favor, needed a power cord, and he had these lying around. I tried them both, and could clearly hear an improvement from one to the other. It turned out that one cable had been sold retail for $250, the other one, $2,000. Now, I'm a trust my ears guy, remember, so I'd love to say the $250 one was better, but in this case, it wasn't. Still I didn't have a clue as to their value, and they both looked fat, well made and mighty pricey, so the choice I made was from the sound I liked, not the price tag influencing me. As for your speaker cables, what brand are they? Do not, I repeat, do not buy Monster cables. They're like Bose, a brand known to those who know little. Look for the lower end of these high end brands, that's where the bang for the buck lies, just before that point of diminishing returns Svart mentioned. In this order: Acoustic Zen, Harmonic Technology, Analysis Plus Oval 8's, Synergistic Research, Transparent Audio, Cardas, Kimber Kable, Audioquest here: app.audiogon.com/listings?utf8=✓&global_search_text=speaker+cablesI promise to bow out as soon as the rockets start firing here, so good luck ! Martin, you may want to consider you could have possibly been a victim of some sort of unrealized confirmation bias?(it happens to everyone at some point) The reason i say this is simple, because as a construction contractor and a bit of an electronics enthusiast, i realize that the wall outlet I plug that uber expensive 3' power cable into is preceded by 100's of feet of cheap 14gauge romex residential grade wire, so no matter what hi end cable follows that Romex cannot make any difference whatsoever (barring a cable loaded with power conditioning rf filters and isolation transformers etc, which would make a 3' cord look pretty lumpy 8)
Picture the analogy of hooking a firehose to the end of a garden hose, it would look kinda cool, but it's not going to give you any more water pressure or volume than the garden hose on it's own, it's a fact, physics are what they are bromee.
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 19, 2014 23:32:01 GMT -6
I get what you're saying Tony. I've honestly heard it all when it comes to this topic. Years back, I used to argue on audiophile sites for months that jitter mattered with the "zeros and ones are zeros and ones, digital is digital" crowd, and now jitter is an accepted factor in sound quality, and my time was wasted putting pearls before swine. These are often the same guys who'd say cables don't sound different. Your analogy makes sense, and I know you're a smart cat, but still, I've heard no difference, and both small and huge differences regarding power cords and speaker cables.
I do use high grade outlets, (PS Audio), there are a few that cost around $50 that I like. I use a power conditioner, but not the crazy money type, one that cost $500. All I've ever said is just try it with an open mind. If you were at my place, I'd bet dollars to dimes you'd hear the difference between the two power cords I mentioned, and I guarantee, a guy with your experience would know which was which.
Really, just try it, and see what you find. Try two or three speaker cables carefully. I've done this hundreds and hundreds of times, occasionally under test conditions. The most important thing I can offer here is this, often the differences in sound quality didn't always reveal themselves in a test listening situation, but I found that subtle tone qualities and differences revealed themselves over time, but once noticed, like a mustard stain on a nice tie you can't take your eyes off, your ears go right to the thing that bugs you, and it never stops bugging you.
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 20, 2014 0:37:56 GMT -6
if it made any logical sense i'd say ok, BUT the cord being the reason just doesn't hold water, you could spend far less than $2k on real improvements, like $350 on this home.comcast.net/~thomasw_2/CheapskateBP4.html It's a balanced power supply/conditioner, it cancels mains line noise by splitting the 120v leg into 2- 60v legs 180* out of phase of one another, in turn canceling any noise present on both supply legs, it also employs mains flux filters. These are things that would provide real world improvements to the condition of your power, but i'm all but insisting that you were hoodwinked by confirmation bias, the only other logical possibility is if there was something wrong with one of those high end cables? or one was more than just a cable? Coming after 100's of feet of garbage residential grade Romex cable, an expensive electrical conductor cannot improve what came before it, it can only continue what the source provided with minimal change, it simply cannot turn water into wine.
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Post by jeromemason on Nov 20, 2014 0:58:05 GMT -6
Obviously there are some that are just wayyyy over the top, but a good pair of speaker cables with quality wire and connectors makes a difference.
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Post by formatcyes on Nov 20, 2014 1:34:01 GMT -6
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Post by jimwilliams on Nov 20, 2014 10:14:15 GMT -6
I use Kimber 8TC speaker cable here. It's rather low cost, 16 runs of teflon coated copper, a PITA to terminate and it sounds wonderful.
I also use his pure silver/teflon AGSS 19 gauge stranded for mic cables and interconnects, it's amazing sounding.
I don't wear jewelry, I listen through it. Silver cable is part of my precious metals retirement account.
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 20, 2014 10:52:43 GMT -6
Tony, I said your statements make sense, BUT, I've never heard you say hey, I tried speaker cable X and the tried speaker call Y, and found they sound the same, maybe you have, but maybe you didn't experiment with this enough. It really doesn't matter to me in the least why speaker cables or power cords sound different.
Someone experienced like Jim Williams' testimonial might give you cause to think on it a little.
Around a year ago, I insisted my friend kcatthedog try a decent power center, ( not Monster), he bought two power outlets I recommended, and then his jaw dropped, and if he had a bias, it was towards there being no way a change in the outlet could make much difference. You got try a few new things my friend.
Jim, Kimber's pretty damn good, and certainly an upgrade from stock radio shack wire or the always revered lamp cord. The Kimber Kable 8TC is one of the best bargains available.
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Post by drbill on Nov 20, 2014 11:12:36 GMT -6
I've never bought into cable mania. I use good stuff - not the best (Mogami everywhere in the studio) and forget about it. There is no doubt better cables. But I can't afford to wire miles of cable in my studio with esoteric stuff. Instead I chose a good mid-line cable and stuck with it. I will say though, I went to a buddy's house once. He's a big name scoring engineer who many of you have heard of. I asked him what he was doing, and he told me "burning in my new speaker cables". With a little hesitation I followed him to his listening room - Dunlevy's, huge mono bloc's that are a 2 man job to pick up each side (L or R), components set on stone, etc., etc., etc. and they did sound amazingly fantastic - they were multi stranded with different gauges and all kind of voodoo stuff. Of course, they were $5000 cables that were about 6-8 feet long. Did they make a big difference? Yeah, I'm pretty sure they did. I trust his ears more than I trust my grandmother. But $5k? No freakin' way....
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 20, 2014 11:37:09 GMT -6
Price is relative. The high end is always well... high priced. Looking for value in the middle is a good idea. That's why I recommended looking at Audiogon and finding a good condition cable there.
drill, I feel you on the difficulty in affording to wire a studio. I found a very reasonable brand of speaker wire called Tributaries around 20 years ago. I replaced standard Radio Shack heavy gauge speaker wire. There was a music track I thought used strings, when I changed the wire, it was obviously a synth, and words on a Tom Waits album I thought were unintelligible, were now easy to understand.
Was there a difference, you betcha. Was the change costly, not so much. like $100 extra. Funny thing, I'm still using the Tributaries wire on my reference high end stereo system. I just have more important purchases in front of speaker cables.
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Post by drbill on Nov 20, 2014 11:54:24 GMT -6
I've spent well over $50,000 in cables and patchbays @ my studio - and that's with Mogami, Elco's and good TT bays. To take it "high end" would put me over $200k I'm pretty sure. Good enough is good enough..... I leave the rest for audiophiles.
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 20, 2014 12:01:21 GMT -6
Tony, I said your statements make sense, BUT, I've never heard you say hey, I tried speaker cable X and the tried speaker call Y, and found they sound the same, maybe you have, but maybe you didn't experiment with this enough. It really doesn't matter to me in the least why speaker cables or power cords sound different. Someone experienced like Jim Williams' testimonial might give you cause to think on it a little.Around a year ago, I insisted my friend kcatthedog try a decent power center, ( not Monster), he bought two power outlets I recommended, and then his jaw dropped, and if he had a bias, it was towards there being no way a change in the outlet could make much difference. You got try a few new things my friend.Jim, Kimber's pretty damn good, and certainly an upgrade from stock radio shack wire or the always revered lamp cord. The Kimber Kable 8TC is one of the best bargains available. Martin, really? buddy, read what i posted previously a little closer, and think about what you're saying man, I just picked up 130' of belden high end mic cable, i'm using a self built balanced power supply, hospital grade outlets, and the best silver audio cabling available(including kimber) on my builds because i hear a difference. That said, i'm not a peekaboo ologist either, the world doesn't end on my side of the wall, what is on the other side matters, i search for the weakest link and use ALL that information to arrive at logical conclusions as to how things affect one another in my studio, and how to improve my situation on whole. Jim Williams work is at the core of my entire setup, i trust what he says because every claim he's made that i've tested turned out to be true by my own hand, he never mentioned anything about this power cable. Your $2000 power cable could indeed maintain an improvement from farther up the line, but it WILL NOT improve the power from the source, much in the same way a fire hose won't improve water flow when attached to a garden hose. I take a bit of pride in this place, it is not in my nature to sit idly by and let flatworld nonsense go by unrefuted, I'm sorry if this sounds harsh, but this is not the first time you've pushed this here, everyone was nice about it the last time, and i'm trying to be nice about it this time(despite the condescending tone u used above), there are dozens of things that folks can do that will make tangible improvements to their rigs for 1% the costs of this illusion you're propagating.
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Post by donr on Nov 20, 2014 12:14:19 GMT -6
I decided to get a decent home system in the late '90's. I bought B+W CDM7NT's with the Nautilus tweeters, and a Cary Audio SLI-80 integrated tube amp. The dealer A/B'ed in mono, two speakers side by side, one with good quality 16 ga. copper zip cord, and the other with a medium level Audioquest bi-wire cable. Bi-wire seemed like voodoo, since the second set of binding posts on the speaker (which come with a jumper for one wire) went into a passive crossover anyway.
But the difference in sound was not subtle. So I bought the Audioquests.
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 20, 2014 12:17:44 GMT -6
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 20, 2014 12:28:28 GMT -6
Hi Tony, apologies my friend, I didn't mean to sound condescending, I think you know me better than that. I also get how much care you're putting into your studio, probably a lot more than even I would, as I don't know 10% of what you do about building..
I'm not really pushing anything, and I understand a power cord can't change what it receives, although I think it might affect what comes out of it to some degree.
All I've ever said in general regarding cables and power cords is for folks to try a few brands. That's all, and I mean that in the most friendly way. In my case I've heard differences, and simply chose the ones I preferred. If you're even bothering with something like Kimber kable, than it's likely you found they sound better than radio shack wire, or am I wrong?
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 20, 2014 12:46:06 GMT -6
Hi Tony, apologies my friend, I didn't mean to sound condescending, I think you know me better than that. I also get how much care you're putting into your studio, probably a lot more than even I would, as I don't know 10% of what you do about building.. I'm not really pushing anything, and I understand a power cord can't change what it receives, although I think it might affect what comes out of it to some degree. All I've ever said in general regarding cables and power cords is for folks to try a few brands. That's all, and I mean that in the most friendly way. In my case I've heard differences, and simply chose the ones I preferred. If you're even bothering with something like Kimber kable, than it's likely you found they sound better than radio shack wire, or am I wrong? no worries buddy, Yeah i hear a difference, things tend to open up in the high end is the overall impression i get from the good audio cabling, I'm going to eventually drop some coin on silver ribbon for my console internals, Jim says it opens up the top a bit there as well, and thats another rubber meets the road point for me.
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Post by sinasoid on Nov 20, 2014 14:28:54 GMT -6
Cables are a part of what I sell for a living. Everything from lower end stuff like GLS to the really high end stuff, like Analysis Plus. I will tell you straight up, that in a blind test, I can't pick out which cables are which.The ONLY factor in determining these differences is capacitance, which essentially will only affect the top end of your signal. If a cable boasts any other kind of audible superiority, it's marketing bullshit.
That said, the more expensive cables do perform better than budget cables in a few categories: RF rejection/shielding, flexibility, reliability. These are the factors that matter and what I make sure my customers know.
I like Evidence Audio Siren II for all of my personal speaker cable needs. In my opinion, the speaker cable is the most important cable to upgrade if you're gonna upgrade anything. Has the highest point of failure and thus needs to be the most reliable link in your signal chain.
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Post by sinasoid on Nov 20, 2014 15:12:57 GMT -6
I'd also like to add one small point.
A customer recently asked me to make him 60 custom audio snake and power cables for his personal bass rig (a little overkill, I have to admit) and asked for me to use the most expensive parts I could find. I tried to talk him down to lower priced parts that functioned exactly the same but he adamantly refused.
In the end, he has peace of mind knowing he has the best possible equipment that money can literally buy, and will likely never worry about whether or not his cabling rig is sufficient or not. If having better equipment makes you more confident in your gear, that should translate to a better mental state and thus a better performance. Not saying better gear makes you play better, but it will give a certain edge of confidence that you wouldn't have otherwise. If you feel confident in your setup with $3 power cables, that's fine. If you will only feel confident when you have the best $300 power cable, that's fine.
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ericn
Temp
Balance Engineer
Posts: 16,099
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Post by ericn on Nov 20, 2014 16:13:20 GMT -6
In the world of a high end cables there is science, marketing, and snake oil . I have always liked Kimber and MIT, both backed by some pretty spectacular science.
Not all Monster Products are bad, in the late 80s their top of the line was stuff was designed by the guy behind MIT cables. You would be supervisors how many hi priced cables are redressed Mogami or Belden.
As Far as power cords I tend to be a non belivier more than a few when opened have been down right scary.
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Post by drbill on Nov 20, 2014 16:56:09 GMT -6
My favorite cable anecdote is from a friend who I love and who has great ears. One day he said his monitoring wasn't right, and he realized his power amp to speaker cables were plugged in backwards. Reversing the cable seemed to put his ears back to ground zero and everything was AOK after reversing the cable. IMO??? Eh....no comment. It was Evidence though. Take it for what it's worth....
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 20, 2014 16:56:50 GMT -6
Sinasoid, you made some good points, but there are a few additional aspects I'd like to add to some of your statements.
Most of us might not hear any difference in blind tests, although I've done a few and was able to identify different speakers cables in one instance, and different amplifiers at another time 4 out of 5 times, which statistically means I'm really hearing something. Blind tests have their own biases too. You sound like a good guy, but when you say something is a fact, like the ONLY difference is capacitance, well there a lots of scientists who might disagree, as well as some very fine musicians.
So far, at least three members here say they hear differences when choosing speaker cables. I don't mean this disrespectfully, but maybe you just don't hear anything or notice it, but that doesn't mean it isn't there. There are many things in audio I never noticed until I was made aware, and then I had trouble not hearing them.
I've noticed over the years that people tend to overlook my statement that differences often reveal themselves over time. Critically listen to a speaker cable or an interconnect for a week, and you might notice something you didn't in a sit down and compare now test. The things you begin to notice might be desirable, or annoying, it depends. Sometimes a difference might be as subtle as you catching yourself listening for shorter periods of time when using one particular brand. You would have to take meticulous notes to even notice it, but I have done that years ago.
Again, all I've advised indiehouse to do is try a few brands and see if he has a preference. I think there's not too much harm done doing that, and some good might come of it.
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Post by sinasoid on Nov 20, 2014 17:15:50 GMT -6
Sinasoid, you made some good points, but there are a few additional aspects I'd like to add to some of your statements. Most of us might not hear any difference in blind tests, although I've done a few and was able to identify different speakers cables in one instance, and different amplifiers at another time 4 out of 5 times, which statistically means I'm really hearing something. Blind tests have their own biases too. You sound like a good guy, but when you say something is a fact, like the ONLY difference is capacitance, well there a lots of scientists who might disagree, as well as some very fine musicians. So far, at least three members here say they hear differences when choosing speaker cables. I don't mean this disrespectfully, but maybe you just don't hear anything or notice it, but that doesn't mean it isn't there. There are many things in audio I never noticed until I was made aware, and then I had trouble not hearing them. I've noticed over the years that people tend to overlook my statement that differences often reveal themselves over time. Critically listen to a speaker cable or an interconnect for a week, and you might notice something you didn't in a sit down and compare now test. The things you begin to notice might be desirable, or annoying, it depends. Sometimes a difference might be as subtle as you catching yourself listening for shorter periods of time when using one particular brand. You would have to take meticulous notes to even notice it, but I have done that years ago. Again, all I've advised indiehouse to do is try a few brands and see if he has a preference. I think there's not too much harm done doing that, and some good might come of it. Point taken. I understand that this is a topic that's been discussed ad nauseum, but just wanted share some of my findings. We could probably go on for years about this very topic, but ultimately, let your ears decide. Don't mean to discredit anyone's personal experience with cables. I will say that I was wrong in making an absolute statement like that. There are definitely other factors that can change the sound of a cable, but I've found those differences so minute that they can only be discerned with quantifiable data—I personally cannot hear a difference other capacitance. Then again, I may just be going deaf from all the shitty, loud rock music I listen to. Here's a spectral analysis of a bunch of different cables, low, mid, and high grade. The graph shows the greatest disparity is in the high frequencies, not really much change anywhere else. www.ovnilab.com/articles/cables.shtmlLet your ears decide though. Graphs are meaningless when it comes to what the brain actually processes as sound.
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 20, 2014 18:09:49 GMT -6
Well, I've said my piece, and guess I oughta vamoose before I dig myself into a hole I can't crawl out of. Thanks for bearing with me guys, this was a sore point for me a long time back.
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