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In Reply to: RE: Cable Cooking/Burnin posted by PingPing on October 27, 2015 at 03:21:23
I hope Ping Ping can also... oh, I am PingPing, hehehe :)But to mention again, I read on KLE Innovations website that they "believe that the cable Burnin/Cooking process can be thought of as an extension/finishing of the Annealing process" which I thought was quite interesting. Perhaps yes but perhaps no because it does not seem to be permanent, or is it permanent, that is the question?
It make sense that this would apply to the signal and ground conductors but it appears that nobody knows why, that is the question? Conditioning the ground conductor makes even more sense when you consider that the "Outgoing circuit is only as good as the Incoming circuit", especially when you consider response/proximity necessary factors and variables to the equation :)
Perhaps it is to do with feedback just like Back EMF feedback from speaker driver voice coils effects reproduction of the signal, the signal itself, and the amplifier or just like feedback in an amplifier can effect the amplifiers output signal quality even though its intended use is to keep the amplifier from oscillating :)
All quite interesting and perhaps we may know one day, perhaps, just not today :)
Edits: 10/30/15 10/30/15 10/30/15 10/30/15 10/30/15 10/30/15Follow Ups:
Other than AudioDharma what other brands of Cable Cookers/Burners are recommended...
To be technical, there is only one Cable Cooker....I created that product name in 1999.
Other conditioning devices are those made by Jim Hagerman, the Nordost unit (primarily for their dealers at approx. $4000, I believe), and the ProBurn made in China.
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