Home Forums Chat Forum One for the audio physics deniers

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  • One for the audio physics deniers
  • ransos
    Free Member

    I expect it was the same as any other demo: the speaker cable has no effect on the sound quality, which is why they went for something tough and cheap.

    I use studio cable for speakers and interconnects. If it’s good enough for recording, it’s good enough for listening.

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    Did they switch to something more expensive during the demo?

    bigjim
    Full Member

    Don’t think I can be bothered.it will support my argument

    😛

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    I use studio cable for speakers and interconnects. If it’s good enough for recording, it’s good enough for listening.

    Really? Why aren’t you using hedge-trimmer cable from B&Q?

    Come to that, why aren’t recording studios using it?

    ransos
    Free Member

    Did they switch to something more expensive during the demo?

    Are you suggesting that designers of expensive speakers are missing an opportunity to show off their product at its best?

    Expensive watches don’t tell the time any better than a £5 casio, but most people think they look nicer. Expensive cable doesn’t even have that going for it.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    because they can write it off to tax?
    It works up to a point. That point is some way below what audiophiles will pay and what they believe

    I find your faith admirable though 😉

    AlexSimon
    Full Member

    Quad once demonstrated their new speakers at a trade show, using hedge trimmer cable from B&Q. Still, I’m sure you know better than the hifi engineers.

    I prefer Wickes basic cable. B&Q is overpriced and a little brash sounding.
    If you’re willing to pay a little extra, Homebase do a lovely Power Drill cable, which makes vocals come right at you from the speakers.

    ransos
    Free Member

    Really? Why aren’t you using hedge-trimmer cable from B&Q?

    Come to that, why aren’t recording studios using it?

    Because at the time I bought the studio cable, I had no idea that hedge-trimmer cable would work properly. I’ve no intention of throwing out perfectly good cable that sounds identical to hedge trimmer cable and identical to your cable.

    therealhoops
    Free Member

    I’ve been saying this for fookin years. I even once sent a signal through a radiator to prove a point. IMO over short distances of a few metres the best speaker cable is 15amp mains cable. But then what would I know? I’ve just been a sound engineer for like the last 17years.

    ransos
    Free Member

    If you’re willing to pay a little extra, Homebase do a lovely Power Drill cable, which makes vocals come right at you from the speakers.

    Actually, if you go for the professional series from Screwfix, it really opens up a 3D soundstage, with a tight rhythm, sparkling vocals and greater authority to the bass than the standard Screwfix cable.

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    ransos – Member

    Did they switch to something more expensive during the demo?

    Are you suggesting that designers of expensive speakers are missing an opportunity to show off their product at its best?

    No. I’m suggesting that the demo quoted, didn’t demonstrate the difference between cheap and HiFi cable, only what the equipment sounded like using cheap cable, on the day.

    My relatively cheap, but specifically designed cable is of two 3-meter lengths, BTW. As it was for the Q.E.D. cable I mentioned before, so the “no difference for 1-meter length” cable clearly doesn’t apply.

    Why AREN’T recording studios using hedge trimmer cable from B&Q, by the way?

    Perhaps you’ll now buy some and install it yourself and then tell us you can’t hear any difference…

    Three_Fish
    Free Member

    Why AREN’T recording studios using hedge trimmer cable from B&Q, by the way?

    They can get it cheaper from Cromwell’s.

    MSP
    Full Member

    Why AREN’T recording studios using hedge trimmer cable from B&Q, by the way?

    Because the egos of musicians need pandering to as much as the audiophiles!

    vinnyeh
    Full Member

    Look, that article is 4 years old- I’m sure the technology has moved on, so the test isn’t really still valid, is it?

    Think how much better bikes are than they were 4 years ago- there’s no comparison, is there?

    ransos
    Free Member

    No. I’m suggesting that the demo quoted, didn’t demonstrate the difference between cheap and HiFi cable, only what the equipment sounded like using cheap cable, on the day.

    If expensive cable made the speakers sound better, the engineers from Quad would use it. What with them being professionals who work on this stuff every day…

    Three_Fish
    Free Member

    I’m sure the technology has moved on…

    Which technology? How is modern electricity different to that from four years ago?

    ransos
    Free Member

    Perhaps you’ll now buy some and install it yourself and then tell us you can’t hear any difference…

    Lacking gullibility, I’ll know that any difference I perceive is purely a figment of my imagination.

    vinnyeh
    Full Member

    Which technology? How is modern electricity different to that from four years ago?

    Modern wires, not modern electricity.

    grum
    Free Member

    Why AREN’T recording studios using hedge trimmer cable from B&Q, by the way?

    Most recording studios use significantly cheaper cabling than your average hi-fi nerd though, strangely. They don’t tend to use stuff claiming to contain magic pixie dust that makes it sound amazing either for some reason.

    ransos
    Free Member

    Modern wires, not modern electricity.

    In what ways did old wires stop electricity doing its job?

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Is that the african or the european old electricity and /or cables?

    Three_Fish
    Free Member

    Modern wires, not modern electricity.

    It’s copper strands wrapped in plastic. I suspect that there’s really very little to change, except for marketing purposes (“new and improved!”)

    Three_Fish
    Free Member

    Is that the african or the european old electricity and /or cables?

    Racist!

    daveh
    Free Member

    You’d think if cable was that important they’d use ‘decent’ stuff inside amplifiers and speakers, not the cheapo rubbish they seem too.

    Just for fun, can anyone explain (scientifically) why bi-wiring is better than single?

    grum
    Free Member

    Now I’m not an engineer – but this is utter, utter bullshit isn’t it?

    VALHALLA Reference Power Cord from Nordost redefines the standards of performance in this category. The Valhalla offers a dramatic sound stage, tremendous dynamic range and superb articulation of the musical event. When used with video components; clarity, detail, and the natural depth of colors are revealed. Valhalla Power Cord uses our new proprietary ‘Dual Micro Mono-filament’ technology to enhance audio and video performance.

    A power cable? Plugged into a standard mains circuit? Really?

    Still, it’s only £2249.95 for a 2 metre cable so I guess it’s worth buying one to see if I can hear/see the difference. I’m sure at that price I would be able to persuade myself it was amazing. Not as good as the Nordost Odin Supreme Reference Power Cord for £20k though.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    My thoughts are that cables in the analogue domain make a huge difference (not always in line with dearer=better).

    Cables in the digital domain make very little difference. As long as they are of sufficient quality to transmit the data at the speed/volume required.

    Apples and oranges. Certainly this is the case with interconnects, but I’ve yet to come across digital speakers. (-:

    Anecdotally, cheap interconnects will make analogue AV look and sound rubbish. I know this – I’ve tested it fairly extensively with my own kit. It’s diminishing returns though; that’s not just physics, it’s common sense. Once a cable isn’t noticeably degrading the signal, that’s your plateau – once there’s no perceptible noise being introduced through the cabling, you can’t then use a ‘better’ cable to have less than no noise.

    With digital interconnects (ie, HDMI) they either work or they don’t. You might as well argue that your digital photographs look better stored on a more expensive hard disk. It’s perhaps worth paying a couple of quid extra for build quality, but that’s it.

    When I built my first home cinema setup using full-sized kit, it was all held together with high quality SCART leads which cost (IIRC) about £20 twelve years ago, and similar quality phono leads. I refreshed it all to move to HD a year or two back, and it’s now held together with (literally) Tesco Value HDMI leads. And looks and sounds better than it ever did.

    Speaker cable, I’m still using my original stuff which was the cheaper end of the “real” speaker cable market (as opposed to bell wire). I don’t know, but I suspect that any well-constructed cable of a similar gauge would sound fairly indistinguishable (perhaps crosstalk might be become a minor issue but I doubt it). I suspect that getting more expensive cable wouldn’t make a fig of difference (see my second paragraph) but dropping to bell wire would.

    </anecdotes>

    peterfile
    Free Member

    Just for fun, can anyone explain (scientifically) why bi-wiring is better than single?

    This seems interesting enough….

    yunki
    Free Member

    I struggle with long sentences but I’m sure that ‘ignorance is bliss’ should cover most things here..

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Just for fun, can anyone explain (scientifically) why bi-wiring is better than single?

    I don’t know about scientifically, but isn’t the point to use a crossover to send two sets of frequencies separately?

    So essentially you’ve got double the ‘bandwidth’ to send the same amount of data. I think there’s also some hokum about low frequencies swamping high ones, or something, but how much of that is BS (or indeed, how much of anything I’ve just typed) I don’t know.

    I never really bought into bi-wiring. Thinking about it, I guess it might make a difference over really long cable runs where attenuation becomes a problem, but when running a few feet from your average TV / amp to a living room speaker it sounds more like snake oil to me.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    This seems interesting enough….

    That’s funny. The TL;DR version is: “bi-wiring sounds initially better because it introduces more errors into the system.”

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    If expensive cable made the speakers sound better

    It doesn’t. It makes the HiFi better able to reproduce music by providing a good transfer of information ,as opposed to using hedge trimmer cable from B&Q, which doesn’t.

    I don’t use “expensive cable”, by the way. As I’ve already said. Twice. Baffles me why you think I do.

    I’ll know that any difference I perceive

    A ha. No actual demonstration, then.

    IRMC.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I don’t know about scientifically, but isn’t the point to use a crossover to send two sets of frequencies separately?

    If you bi-wire there’s no crossover, just two filters. You remove a piece of the crossover network in the shape of a little gold plated bar between the two sets of speaker terminals.

    This means that.. er.. well.. not sure.

    I did it, and there was a small difference perhaps. However I progressed to bi-amping and there was a big difference. Although when I last posted this I got slammed for it.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    If expensive cable made the speakers sound better

    That’s the distinction I was trying to make earlier. It doesn’t make them sound better, it makes them sound less worse.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    If you bi-wire there’s no crossover, just two filters. You remove a piece of the crossover network in the shape of a little gold plated bar between the two sets of speaker terminals.

    I assumed that in a bi-wired system there would be an active crossover in the amp. What you’re saying is, typically the amp sends the same signal down both pairs of cables, with each driver then passively filtering the presented signal? Wow, if so, that’s… special.

    bigjim
    Full Member

    I was once considering spending a lot on cables to my monitors (like maybe £20 even) until I took one apart to change the tweeter and saw the pieces of thin cheese connecting everything together inside. I bet its the same inside ‘audiophile’ kit.

    ransos
    Free Member

    It doesn’t. It makes the HiFi better able to reproduce music by providing a good transfer of information ,as opposed to using hedge trimmer cable from B&Q, which doesn’t.

    The cable makes no difference whatsoever. If you believe otherwise, by all means try to win the $1 million on offer.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    The cable makes no difference whatsoever. If you believe otherwise, by all means try to win the $1 million on offer.

    *unplugs cable*

    Where do I get my money?

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    The cable makes no difference whatsoever.

    Says ransos. Again. Despite absolutely no direct experience of such. Perhaps you think that if you keep saying the same thing over and over again, you’ll convince.

    If you believe

    … and again…

    ransos
    Free Member

    You’d think if cable was that important they’d use ‘decent’ stuff inside amplifiers and speakers, not the cheapo rubbish they seem too.

    So, cheap cable inside speakers and amplifiers, cheap cable in recording studios, yet expensive speaker cable and interconnects make a noticeable difference. Riiiggght.

    ransos
    Free Member

    Says ransos. Again. Despite absolutely no direct experience of such. Perhaps you think that if you keep saying the same thing over and over again, you’ll convince.

    Says the people who have done double-blind trials. If you believe you can show otherwise, there’s a $1 million prize on offer.

    I’m not interested in convincing you – I just pity the gullible.

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 230 total)

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