".....Brian said it was only about 85% broken-in and that it continues to get better about 3 to 4 months out as the dielectric carrier becomes fully polymerized ...."
Sadly, Brian Kyle passed away of cancer not too long ago and his family is carrying on his last wishes that the Quicksilver Gold product still be available to audiophiles.
I can see were a small amount of conductive coating could be beneficial. Would it not increase surface area contact? My concern with the above post is the need of pliers to remove connectors; not a fan of connections that tight.
I can see were a small amount of conductive coating could be beneficial. Would it not increase surface area contact? My concern with the above post is the need of pliers to remove connectors; not a fan of connections that tight.
As I understand it, when you look at a contact at the microscopic level, its surface is far from smooth and flat. (in fact, that's what Furutech addresses to some extent with their polishing process.) These contact enhancers are meant to fill in the "surface pitting" and increase the contact area as well as address some other electrical parameters that lower the noise floor.
As I understand it, when you look at a contact at the microscopic level, its surface is far from smooth and flat. (in fact, that's what Furutech addresses to some extent with their polishing process.) These contact enhancers are meant to fill in the "surface pitting" and increase the contact area as well as address some other electrical parameters that lower the noise floor.
The above is true if the "contact enhancer" world was perfect. BUT, these contacts are not like Torqued together machine parts that will have almost no minimal movement due to vibration, other motion, hot/cold thermal changes, etc. Electronic components like to move around; that is why tube pins have some form of spring/clamping action [unless you solder the wires to the pins - excellent if done correctly]. Speaking of tubes, try thoroughly cleaning inside the sockets after some GOO.
Don't most RCA jacks (female) actually contact on the sides of the male pin, not the tip? That is the way the ones I have so work.
Tight connections mean less chance for oxidation and less chance of vibration causing changes in contact resistance.
Soldering tube pins seems pretty risky. You could damage the pins/tube, and thermal cycling with soldered pins seems like it could lead to stress fractures.
I am not at all surprised that the sonic impact is every bit as much as obtained from having your gear cryo-cooled.
About every tweak I have ever bought sits in a drawer long forgotten. The only thing I use now is Deoxit with some Q-tips. I'm not saying anything against goo,but is it really worth the trouble....not in my experience.