Well $h!t, the guy actually has me intrigued. I, personally, think all that fussing outside the audio range can't possibly make any difference anyone would hear except in the most offensive cases of horrible quality and cheap cables. Some of the discussion about resonances outside the audio band affecting those in the audio band seem dubious. But not out of the realm of possibility. After reading the interview I'd be willing to listen to a demontration and comparison with an open mind. Though I wouldn't expect to come away with a different perspective than I already have. And I'm not likely to ever be in a position to audition any of these products so it doesn't matter. And I'm not even phased by the loss of that opportunity (no pun intended).
EDIT: Just to be clear... There does seem to be some recognizable passion and drive/motivation in the interview. How much real world difference these efforts make has to be small. Perhaps inaudible.?. Unless you have unlimited funds it's certainly not worth the price. And...
Arranging the corrections as outlined in the interview there has to be at least some signal attenuation. Evidenced by the inference in the interview that speaker technology is a factor in product development. I don't expect it's a significant amount. But I wonder how the HiFi guys would react to signal padding as a means to achieve signal improvement since these two things are typically juxtapposed. Padding the signal in the speaker line changes speaker damping seen by the amplifier and the affect of any global feedback circuit intended to reduce distortions.
EDIT: Just to be clear... There does seem to be some recognizable passion and drive/motivation in the interview. How much real world difference these efforts make has to be small. Perhaps inaudible.?. Unless you have unlimited funds it's certainly not worth the price. And...
Arranging the corrections as outlined in the interview there has to be at least some signal attenuation. Evidenced by the inference in the interview that speaker technology is a factor in product development. I don't expect it's a significant amount. But I wonder how the HiFi guys would react to signal padding as a means to achieve signal improvement since these two things are typically juxtapposed. Padding the signal in the speaker line changes speaker damping seen by the amplifier and the affect of any global feedback circuit intended to reduce distortions.
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