20th Mar 2019, 1:05 pm | #501 | |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
Quote:
You'll know of course that, except when they are constant, the electric and magnetic parts of the EM field are inseparable (curl E = -dB/dt, curl H = Jf + dD/dt). Anything which affects one will have at least some effect on the other. The magnitude of that effect is less at lower frequencies, but it is still there, even down in the audio range. Cheers, GJ
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20th Mar 2019, 4:58 pm | #502 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
That coal bunker in post #80 looks like a "posh" version of the photo I showed in post#18.
I would love to get hold of one and test the black stuff to find out if it really is indeed coal. |
21st Mar 2019, 12:37 am | #503 |
Pentode
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Halesowen, West Midlands, UK
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Re: Audiophoolery?
Blue arctic cable with gold connectors, they dont look as good as the toaster leads but they
cost more so they must be better
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21st Mar 2019, 1:56 am | #504 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
The blue outer makes then look like arctic, but they do have silver conductors, and only 18pF/Metre capacitance! A bit of an overkill for audio methinks.
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21st Mar 2019, 5:08 am | #505 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
It looks like wikipedia reflects common usage rather than
Faraday invented his screen to demonstrate magnetic coupling between two coils was not capacitive as some others had suggested. The whole point was that it segregated electric and magnetic fields. While Maxwell's equations show that you cannot, for alternating fields, affect one without affecting the other, it is quite possible to have a significant imbalance in the relative strengths of the two components in the near field of an object. It is possible to make E-field and H-field probes which measure each component individually. It is possible to generate one field disproportionately more strongly than the other, at least in the near-field. An electromagnetic wave-pair comes winging along in free space, many lambda from its source. The two waves are in equilibrium, each inducing into the other, settled at 377 volts per metre for every ampere per metre. It hits a Faraday shield which shunts the electric field component. On the far side of the shield, there is very little electric field wave, but the magnetic wave continues unabated. As the magnetic wave moves further beyond the shield, it induces a growing electric wave accompanying it, and that wave strts inducing back into the magnetic wave until the pair balance in equilibrium with 377 (V/m)/(A/m) On the input side of the shield the shunted electric wave is reflected with phase reversal, and as the electric wave travels, it similarly induces a magnetic wave and they too eventually in the far field of the screen settle as an equilibrium pair Seen in the far-field, Faraday screens don't look like screens at all. In the close field they do something useful, principally to electric field components. A lot of the things we do are in the near field. If you're building a sensitive receiver, then you want a proper screening box to put it in, not a Faraday screen. If you're building a transformer, a Faraday screen between windings may be rather desirable to block capacitive coupling of rubbish on the mains, but you don't want a magnetic screen, that would ruin the transformer operation. It is very advantageous to have separate names for general and field-specific screens. David
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21st Mar 2019, 7:56 am | #506 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
"Blue arctic cable with gold connectors," I love reading the blurb these purveyors of pricey gewgaws come out with, it's like the spiel you get in posh restaurants. Who writes this twaddle? Maybe they've brought back Shelley, Keats And Joyce from the dead and have them slaving away in a cellar writing adjective laden odes to over priced bibelots.
Andy.
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21st Mar 2019, 8:34 am | #507 | |
Nonode
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Location: Bognor Regis, West Sussex, UK.
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Re: Audiophoolery?
Quote:
Several versions are offered by different manufacturers but they all seem to consist of an insulated, generally wooden, box with an electrical connector, usually a binding post, to attach a wire and some form of metal strip / wire / mesh inside to make contact with the in fill. The infill is of various materials, coal has been suggested as one. We all love to snip and joke about these and true, the claims made as to how they work are hilarious and are not supported by any known scientific theory. They should be totally useless. BUT has anyone actually, objectively, tested one, both electrically and by listening? Peter |
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21st Mar 2019, 10:45 am | #508 | |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
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21st Mar 2019, 10:51 am | #509 | ||||
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Re: Audiophoolery?
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Cheers, GJ
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21st Mar 2019, 11:42 am | #510 |
Hexode
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Royal Berkshire, UK.
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Re: Audiophoolery?
All this talk of Faraday cages now makes me realise why my aunties Budgie could hit those high notes!
Not only was it grounded, it was in a way, shielded from outside interference. The sandpaper in the bottom of the cage must have acted much like one of the oak boxes, also mentioned earlier. You'd of thought cuttlefish must have some impact on enclosure resonance. Mark
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21st Mar 2019, 3:34 pm | #511 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
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21st Mar 2019, 4:00 pm | #512 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
It's impossible to do that test without being affected by it and also affecting the outcome.
Anyone who has stumped up 13 grand for a badly made box of black grit and a few metal strips is not going to admit it was a waste of money. No-one who's laid out so much brass can remain impartial. Heisenberg! Any test done with a DIY version , however similar will just get decried by the believers as invalid because it wasn't a real one. Take a wire outside (PME permitting!) and drive a nice copper coated steel rod into your garden, and use the whole planet! David
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21st Mar 2019, 4:02 pm | #513 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
Even if there was a zero result "they" would say it's non conclusive "my ears are better than any other measuring device". What larks!
To (miss) quote Flanders and Swan "I never listen to music much, it's the high fidelity". Mind you a glass (or two) of good scotch and "The Planets" sounds marvellous on my engineering based HiFi, try and measure (a good measure, two fingers is about right) that! |
22nd Mar 2019, 1:48 pm | #514 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
I visit another forum that's dedicated to hifi. It wouldn't be fair to name it. Being sold on there are some second hand mains leads, varying in price from 90 to £120. I mean, the current travels through fuses that are a few thou thick, so what use are 'big' cables?!! The difference in impedance between thick cables and normal ones is the square root of sod all. And in any case, combined with the mains ring main, it all makes no difference whatsoever, and certainly not to the sound. The mind boggles at the level of snake oil being consumed.
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22nd Mar 2019, 9:32 pm | #515 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
Surely a second hand one would be worth more as it's already been "burned in"
"Do you want to save your N.O.S. tubes from further wear?" Then you need a cable cooker. I would love to put my scope on this thing and find out what it's really doing if anything.
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22nd Mar 2019, 9:56 pm | #516 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
A thought just occurred to me: How is being a hi-fi bore any different from being a real ale drinker? To anybody "outside the circle", beer is just beer and music just sounds like music.
But then, a pint of real ale doesn't cost any more (sometimes less!) than a pint of cold fizzy water with flavourings and ethanol (Your bias may be showing a little here -- Ed.), and there is a difference you can taste. When it comes to expense, ticking off beers on a chart is not in the same league as spending £100 on a few metres of fancy cable .....
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22nd Mar 2019, 10:30 pm | #517 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
The 'cable cooker' takes the biscuit. Careful you don't 'overcook' it though (the FAQ are hilarious).
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22nd Mar 2019, 11:05 pm | #518 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
My cables are so old I think they are "broken in" already. As to beers, they do have different tastes (all lovely) but the evidence is gone, yum yum.
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22nd Mar 2019, 11:36 pm | #519 |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
My speaker cables are now about 50+ years old. perhaps that's why the music I listen to is old as well - takes all that time to travel along the cable - but sounds just as good as it did back then.
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23rd Mar 2019, 12:04 am | #520 | |
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Re: Audiophoolery?
Quote:
Craig |
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