Skeptic or just plain hard headed
So here is the deal to be fair I am going to be open minded about this because Mike really made me feel like I would be missing out if I return the cable without a proper burn-in (great salesman), and since he had such conviction I now think I have to test this thing out right??. Now I know that there are testimonials out there about how the MA cable improved over 100s of hours in their system, and that they are now "blown away". However can you really hear a profound difference in a cable you play in your system over 170 hours or so? I would think a gradual difference would be harder to detect. I mean my system seems to sound better to me everyday without making any changes. Is it because of continued cable and electronics burn in?? maybe. Or maybe its just my brain becoming more intimate with the sound of my system. Well this test I'm doing should reveal a night and day difference from what the system sounds like today with the cable pre burn-in if there is any merit to the notion. In regards to does it sound better than my existing cable that is yet to be determined. I think my goal now is to prove or dis-prove if cable burn-in is a real thing. This whole idea has evolved from if it's an improvement or not over what I use today. We can discuss that later.
I now have the cable connected between a cd player , and a sound bar with a CD playing on repeat. The disc of choice for this burn-in is rather dynamic so it should be a good test. At the end of 16 days (384 hours) I will move the cables to my reference system and do about another 20 hours of additional burn-in to compensate for moving the cable. This will put a total of 452 hours of burn-in on the PH3. When I put this cable back in my system I sure hope it sings because this is a lot to go through to add a cable to your system. Mike if you are right I will eat crow and will preach from the highest mountain top that you are right, and that cable burn-in is REAL. For me anyway the myth will be considered busted or reinforce my belief that cable burn-in is a bunch of BS.
For those who will argue the point of cable burn-in I fully understand the concept, and I don't plan to get sucked down that rat hole and I won't argue that....yet because at the end of this test I may be in your camp and I don't want to have a steady diet of crow so for now I will remain neutral on the subject until the test is complete. However I will be totally transparent and honest about the results. So not trying to make anyone angry as I know beliefs about audio are sensitive subjects, and rightfully so this hobby is expensive and I like you have a substancial investment in this. Just trying to get to the truth. I also understand that cable burn-in may actually happen when you consider it from a scientific perspective, but the real question is can you actually hear the difference.
I will report back to this thread in 17 days from today (need at least one day to evaluate) with the results.
happy listening!!
-Keith
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- 440 posts total
I use Morrow cables and I might like them a little better BEFORE break-in, although I have to admit they can sound fine after break-in...Still...I simply use them for a while and then swap them out hoping they will "un" break-in so I can put them back in the rotation, but have to constantly monitor them to make sure they don’t get "too" broken in as that just ruins everything until I swap them out for ones that have rested and lost their broken-in sound. This involves careful listening, and the ability to jump up and swap out the cables fast to insure no excessive break-in has occurred. |
barnettk, thank you for the complement. I used to be "hard headed" many years ago, then decided to try things rather than give an opinion. There have been many surprises, and what I learned about burn in was among them. Currently I am engaged in an ongoing experiment, if you will, about a method I named the Schroeder Method of Interconnect Placement in which I use splitters to literally double the interconnect cables. See discussion of it at my article, Audio Blast: The Schroeder Method of Interconnect Placement, and also in the thread here in the cable forum with my name attached to it. You will likely find that to be challenging to logic, but simple comparison would yield quite a different result than what I expect the burn in test to yield. (Not trying to sidetrack the entire discussion, just adding for your benefit, as you are now interested in my thoughts. But please see the warnings, caveats, etc. associated, i.e. with class D amps.) There are some things in audio that result in different outcomes than one expects. Opinions abound, but fewer are those who actually try. It is the trying that has made the journey so amazing to me. :) |
@douglas_schroeder I actually saw that article and started reading it. It looked rather interesting. Never thought to try that approach. I will finish the article and may have to give it try myself, pending if it was a favorable outcome. I attempted to sign up on the site to comment but the site is not allowing new members I suspect. There is a a lot of interesting reads so it would be fun to join those conversations. |
Here is the link for those who lack the patience to dig around searching forever....https://www.dagogo.com/doug-schroeders-audiophile-law-6-thou-shalt-not-overemphasize-burn-in/ After reading the article. my main criticism is they did this with just one component, a relatively low priced device. And that they assumed the not broken in device was not broken in. they admit it had some time already on it) So any extrapolation to the world of all devices is a stretch. But a nice attempt. ANd to say thee re variations in components. Some change a lot some not at all. So again one test does not offer enough to draw conclusions about all components. As I have mentioned before. in particular cables, I have noted terrible sound from a Kimber Hero 7m XL at first use. (so much so I decided to return it, no question) but then after several hours it became less objectionable, and the next day was decent... So much so I reversed my decision to return it. The 'proof' it was not just getting used to it, as later on when I replaced the Hero with a 7m Parsec, which over a month failed to impress, Ad the dealer was repeatedly claiming just wait, let it break in.(so in effect proving I did not "just get used to" the previous Kimber over a few days.) |
I’ve oft mentioned this on similar threads - that it would be exceedingly difficult to determine the sole effects of burn-in of cables or any other audio thing, speakers perhaps especially, since there are simply too many variables that affect the sound, even day to day and week to week. Or to attribute all changes to burn in. Variables include those that aren’t normally considered or aren’t deemed very important. I am quite sure we don’t know all the variables that affect sound quality. If someone says, oh, the sound was better in such and such ways after two weeks does that mean he’s done nothing whatsoever to his system in all that time, just waited around for burn in changes to occur? You mean he just sits there and watches the paint on the wall peel? Who keeps careful logs? Answer at 11. |
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