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REVIEW: White Lightning Yardmaster Cable

75.143.208.132

Posted on June 16, 2008 at 03:42:54
Model: Yardmaster
Category: Cable
Suggested Retail Price: $50.00
Description: DIY ICs and speaker cables
Manufacturer URL: White Lightning

Review by Epstein on June 16, 2008 at 03:42:54
IP Address: 75.143.208.132
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for the Yardmaster


Built according to the instructions in the review, these cables are the first DIY recipe I've tried that sound as good, not just different, as I always hope for. Better, in fact.

The only depsrture I made from the design Jeff Day describes is that, for the interconnects, I used all 3 wires, 2 for the ground. There's plenty of room in the Switchcraft RCAs for 2 ground wires, twisted together and tinned. It may not be clear to you from the pix in the article (it wasn't to me at first) that the ground wires are trapped between the 2 ears that get crimped down around them. That helps shield the ground from the hot.

Be careful of the heat you use. The dialectric has a very low melting point and too much heat easily melts it causing a short. Ask me how I know. I used the 600 degree F. setting on my Hakko, around 45 watts.

The pix also show the bare wires being soldered; do tightly twist and tin them first. The RCAs are made of a very thin metal, the sheath melts easily as stated above, and the less heat applied, the better. The metal is so thin and light, in fact, that I found it essential to tape the barrels and finger clamp the wires to my bench to keep everything aligned before applying solder.





One other essential tweak to the recipe is to apply some shrink tubing over the hot pin and exposed wire as seen in the first picture. Once again, the metal is so thin it bends easily and may come in contact with the ground collar. How many RCAs went in the waste basket? Let's just say I'm on my second order of 24! No sacrifice is too great for our art.

Just as Jeff Day writes, the speaker cables have the preponderance of the characteristic sound of these cables. The interconnects used on their own have the same general flavor but much less of it. Conversely, the speaker cables used with other ICs, 89259 terminated with Eichmanns, for example, exhibit much of the full flavor of a 100% White Lightning set-up.

About $50 worth of Yardmaster power cord, Switchcraft RCAs and Swiss-made bananas (sourced from Audio Magus) supplied 3 pairs of 3' ICs and a pair of speaker cables to fully White Lightning my rig.

For some context, I have used or built MAC, anti-Cables, MIT AV-1, cross-connects, magnet wire of every gauge, CAT 5, 89259, and employed terminations from Radio Shack thru Eichamnn and on to both cryo'd and non-cryo'd Vampire 800C. None of these combinations sound as good in my rig as the White Lightning. None of them exhibited as large a change in the sound, either. In my experience, cables all make a difference but until now, I mostly had to strain, study and ponder to discover what that difference was. The WLs, OTOH, hit you in the head with a left shoe.

These cables sound BIG! First thing I noticed was bigger bass, then a wider image and slightly larger than life singers and players. I heard all the notes that more analytical cables present while at the same time,they were...well, ... less analytical.

Both my DIY 45 and Classe Model 70 amplifiers tend to have a bit of treble emphasis in my lively room. Not at all a bad thing to my aged ears. The White Lightning roll that off a bit but cymbals still have a better-than-ever shimmer and violins and alto sax go high and tight without any screech or shout. Playing the Brahms Double with Rostropovich, Oistrakh and Szell/Cleveland, there was none of the boiled-over Columbia treble emphasis that definitely exists on this recording. The cello was truly gorgeous but the real stand out, Oistrakhs violin, as whatever these cables do to the highs they take away the brightness and leave the sheen. The same was true on Count Basie, 'Chairman Of The Board'. There are tom-tom thwacks that startle and the brass section crescendos are rich without losing any 'bite'. On the other hand, Alison Krauss still makes you want to dash around the house and tape up the window glass.

Even with the emphasized bass, all the instruments and voices still have wonderful tone. Really, the White Lightning cables yield perfect instrumental timbre. My JBL 2226 mid-woofers need all the help they can get down low; high efficiency means there's little output below 40 Hz. Having more powerful bass while still being able to pick out the bassoons from massed woodwinds is an absolute treat. Better still, once you've discovered the parts and pieces that result from installing them in your system you'll just want to recline a bit and listen to music.

A trip to Wal-mart is such fun, too. Listen to Rodney Carrington on the drive over: "attention Wal-mart shoppers, it's 8 o'clock, time to beat your kids">






Product Weakness: Frequency spectrum may not be right for all systems<br>Low melting point of dialectric
Product Strengths: Powerful bass, instrumental timbre, low price.


Associated Equipment for this Review:

Amplifier: Clase Model 70, DIY 45
Preamplifier (or None if Integrated): sometimes PRC pot passive, other times heavily modified ARC LS-1
Sources (CDP/Turntable): VPI HW-19 Mk IV, SME III, Benz Ace L
Speakers: 2-way Pi Theatre 4 clones
Cables/Interconnects: as reviewed
Music Used (Genre/Selections): Classical, Jazz, new Grass
Room Size (LxWxH): 17.5 x 11.5 x 8
Room Comments/Treatments: DIY Ethan Winer traps
Time Period/Length of Audition: from 50 hours on
Type of Audition/Review: Product Owner


Walmart DIY speaker cable, year late but my opinion, posted on November 2, 2009 at 19:07:09
py272
Audiophile

Posts: 36
Location: Hawaii
Joined: February 20, 2007
I have only recently stumbled across the various threads discussing the utilization of the Walmart Woods Yardmaster Patiocord extension cord as a speaker cable and was very interested because of its low cost. However, one of my concerns was determining if Walmart still carries this specific extension cord since the initial hype of this cable is about 2 years old and, if yes, has the construction of the cord remained the same. In visiting my local Walmart, I was surprised that I was still able to find this particular extension cord for sale but the price has risen to about $10 in my area. The packaging is about the same and the actual cable is still white.

As to the construction of the cord, I am not able to tell if it has changed so I figured that the only reasonable way to determine this is to create my own speaker cable from this extension cord and let the results speak for themselves. Because my goal was to incur minimal cost and effort on this project, I basically cut the extension cord to the desired length, stripped the covering and wires, and twisted the green and white wires together. The cables were used as is without any termination.

What did I hear? In comparison to some low cost Kimber cables (not sure of the model but they were braided brown and black cables) I was using between my Luxman receiver and Celestion 1 speakers (a Sony Playstation PS1 is my cd source), I am very pleased with its performance. Even with my meager system, I heard improvements similar to what the reviewer of this thread reported. Basically, what I noticed most after about a 15 hour break in period with my CD specifically designed to break in stereo components (I believe it is manufactured by Purist Audio Design) are: 1) The individual instruments are larger with nice space around each instruments; 2) the soundstage has expanded both left-to-right and front-to-back; 3) the highs are rolled off but there is great transparency and the instruments have nice shimmer and decay, and 4) the sound is very musical and non-fatiguing with less apparent distortion.

As to any downsides of this speaker cable, I have not noticed any but I am sure if you were to compare it to mega bucks cables, you could find something to complain about. For me, I have quit the game of purchasing exotic cables to only later determine another cable is being touted as the king in town. Now, I just enjoy the music and if I stumble across a new low cost product, I will give it a whirl. Hence my use of a Sony Playstation PS1 as a cd source, my Luxman receiver which I found abandoned for the city’s bulk pickup program and now this fantastic DIY speaker cable.

Give it a try as the cost is minimal. Just make sure you give the cable adequate break in as I was not at all impressed during my first audition of the cable with zero hours on them.

RE: (strong)REVIEW: White Lightning Yardmaster Cable(/strong), posted on June 17, 2008 at 13:11:40
rwiley
Audiophile

Posts: 293
Location: Southeast
Joined: February 20, 2001
Nice review. I agree that the WLM's sound pretty darn good. Especially when you consider the cost.

Did you follow JD's recipe for the speaker cables? He uses white and green wires for positive and the black for negative. They sound better on my system constructed as per your IC's i.e., the white for positive and black and green for negative.

RE: (strong)REVIEW: White Lightning Yardmaster Cable(/strong), posted on June 19, 2008 at 08:27:35
Stephæn
Bored Member

Posts: 2137
Joined: September 23, 1999
Contributor
  Since:
March 1, 1999
A couple members of the Bad Boys Benevolent Association were using this
wire as speaker cables before Jeff tried them in his system. Pete Riggle
turned me on to them, and after Jeff heard them in both our systems, he
gave them a shot in his. They remain my low-cost reference, but Jeff has
moved on to others.

After much experimentation, I use the white and green wires for positive
and the black for negative, but Pete prefers white for positive and
black and green for negative in his system. He has much longer cable
runs than I.

You can get some interesting spatial effects if you float the green on both ends.

I don't care for the wire when it comes to building ICs.

æ

If the world didn't suck, we'd all fall off.

RE: (strong)REVIEW: White Lightning Yardmaster Cable(/strong), posted on June 18, 2008 at 04:10:13
Thanks for the applause.

I used the white for hot, green and almost black for neutral on both ICs and speaker. Easier to keep track of what was what. My eyes aren't so good for close-up anymore, the green and black are somewhat similar-looking, and I just hate to tighten a barrel, apply heat shrink and then have to ask myself if I got the colors right.

The other thing I did different was use adhesive lined shrink on the speaker cables, crimped down between the + and - with the needle noses to make that nice "Y" you get on store bought.

I was thinking of making a double run..., posted on June 20, 2008 at 21:15:01
clio09
Audiophile

Posts: 1028
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Joined: January 29, 2006
One cable for the positive and one for the negative twisting together two conductors per side. Anyone else try this?

RE: (strong)REVIEW: White Lightning Yardmaster Cable(/strong), posted on June 18, 2008 at 14:13:27
rwiley
Audiophile

Posts: 293
Location: Southeast
Joined: February 20, 2001
Yep...that's the way I think they sound best. I started needing bifocals years ago.

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