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
Glubson, obviously the listening tests were done by folks who weren’t hearing impaired. No offense to you personally. And the results correlated with wire direction. I.e., they weren’t random. Duh! There is no operator error when 80,000 hear it.
Cables don’t need burn in. Electrons are in orbital shells in the metal atoms and are not in the least influenced in any lasting or "memory" manner by current applied. This is silly to the point of hilarity to the point of sadness.

False science is worse than no science.  This statement has no basis and oversimplified.
And, then, the falsity of a motive denied....

Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears.
I have come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.  🐍💩
"..obviously the listening tests were done by folks who weren’t hearing impaired."

It is not obvious at all. We are still waiting to find out who those people were and how they did it. For the initial simplicity, we can assume they were not hearing impaired although the solidity of that assumption is not that great.


"And the results correlated with wire direction. I.e., they weren’t random."

What results? Whose results? When and where results?

"There is no operator error when 80,000 hear it."

Which 80 000? Where did that number come from and how was the study conducted on such a large number?


Even if all 80 000 exist, your favorite reference might suggest the possibility for a multiple-operator error.

glupson
"..obviously the listening tests were done by folks who weren’t hearing impaired."

It is not obvious at all. We are still waiting to find out who those people were and how they did it. For the initial simplicity, we can assume they were not hearing impaired although the solidity of that assumption is not that great.

"And the results correlated with wire direction. I.e., they weren’t random."

What results? Whose results? When and where results?
"There is no operator error when 80,000 hear it."
Which 80 000? Where did that number come from and how was the study conducted on such a large number?

Even if all 80 000 exist, your favorite reference might suggest the possibility for a multiple-operator error.

>>>>God gave you two ears and one mouth for a reason. Wake up and smell the coffee. ☕️ I guess you didn’t realize I’m an audio insider. You’re obviously an audio outsider.