Cable Snake Oil Antidote


Some might find this Cable Snake Oil Antidote interesting with respect to LRC, the signal and the system.

Cables affect the sound and the effect is system dependent.

Another's opinion on a cable in a vastly different system may not be valid.
ieales
I'll pull the fuse module out and take some pictures when I get home. I'm certain nobody here is using gear with anything like what I've got. The module allows me to fuse either the hot or neutral, or both. I'm real skeptical about fuses because I use very cheap ones from AutoZone. Bussmann brand to be specific. I assume a very cheap fuse would have a lot of variance from one part to another and so far I've gone through 4 and there's been no difference whatsoever. Maybe it's because the module is designed to filter noise from the line rather aggressively. If so, that would support my theory that poorly designed power supplies with inadequate filtering benefit from exotic fuses. What I do know is that it's impossible to inject any kind of noise into the amplifier through the power line and I've tried my best trying to help another member sort out a noise issue. 
Whoever said that recording studios - including any that value high fidelity reproduction - use super expensive cabling is a liar. 

Sure they use adequately shielded cables, but most of the time it's the cheapest thing available that meets spec. 

"High end" power cables and fuses are two items you will NEVER see any reputable engineer (either EE or in the recording profession) use or recommend. Period. 
You've just called a few audio engineers here, liars, unless the use of "super" is taken literally. Studios have upgraded to expensive cabling when they could afford to.

All the best,
Nonoise
Post removed 
@ostensible_constituency - People spent multiple thousands per mic and thousands more having them rebuilt. Do you think they would do that and use the cheapest possible cable?

Some of the best recording studios were built by fanatical audiophiles. They didn't scrimp on anything!