@dave_b
So Just got off the phone with Richard Vandersteen. Had a nice chat. So you are correct the DBS system is to keep the dielectric formed in the cable essentially keeping it burned in once it has completed its initial burn in. Which is why you notice that your system sounds better earlier in the play cycle. So now that I am a proponent of burn in which is what this whole thread is about I have to believe that the DBS works as advertised regardless of what the critics have to say in light of our conversation. However he did also say that the entire system also has to go through this same process as the system warms up. I guess my questions would be so if you are keeping the dielectric formed in the IC's and speaker cables does the standby mode of your processors, sources, and power amps do the same thing by keeping the caps charged in those components? I would think if not and you allow your system to sit for two weeks you would still have to go back through a period of burn in on the gear, but not the cables. Im willing to bet that it takes longer for the dielectric to form in an IC or speaker cable than an audio component. I suspect that caps in your components form quicker since there is higher current going through those components. So while the system may sound better at start up with DBS... the system should still also get better with play as the other component's caps form/warm up. Then he asked me what speaker I use and we went on about that. He is a very passionate person about his work in this business and it was nice talking with him.
So Just got off the phone with Richard Vandersteen. Had a nice chat. So you are correct the DBS system is to keep the dielectric formed in the cable essentially keeping it burned in once it has completed its initial burn in. Which is why you notice that your system sounds better earlier in the play cycle. So now that I am a proponent of burn in which is what this whole thread is about I have to believe that the DBS works as advertised regardless of what the critics have to say in light of our conversation. However he did also say that the entire system also has to go through this same process as the system warms up. I guess my questions would be so if you are keeping the dielectric formed in the IC's and speaker cables does the standby mode of your processors, sources, and power amps do the same thing by keeping the caps charged in those components? I would think if not and you allow your system to sit for two weeks you would still have to go back through a period of burn in on the gear, but not the cables. Im willing to bet that it takes longer for the dielectric to form in an IC or speaker cable than an audio component. I suspect that caps in your components form quicker since there is higher current going through those components. So while the system may sound better at start up with DBS... the system should still also get better with play as the other component's caps form/warm up. Then he asked me what speaker I use and we went on about that. He is a very passionate person about his work in this business and it was nice talking with him.

