Do speaker cables need a burn in period?


I have heard some say that speaker cables do need a 'burn in', and some say that its totally BS.
What say you?


128x128gawdbless
Post removed 
azbrd
@geoffkait

>>>>Didn’t you get the memo? Maybe you were sleeping. You don’t need to be concerned with any signal travel in the “opposite direction,” only any signal travel toward your speakers, I.e., the correct direction. Follow?

This is the pseudoscience I'm calling you on, an AC circuit (what connects a amp to a speaker) does NOT behave as you are implying! DC circuits DO behave as you describe. Please stop trying to push your Star Trek science on these forums!

>>>>There are only two possibilities. 

1. You don’t know what directionality means.

2. You don’t know what AC means.

Beam yourself up, Scotty!
Do pistons in an internal combustion engine have directionality?

La meme chose.
There is only need for speaker cable burn-in in the minds of people who believe in it. There are no moving parts, unlike an automobile engine that does require a break-in period for the bearings and piston rings to take a “set”.