I missed your query earlier. Ralph's information is pretty interesting to me, as it seems a quite plausible mechanism for what I'm hearing. I have only "measured" the reduction in noise and distortion using the most sensitive instruments I have: my ears. Putting the Tripoint system on the chassis grounds of my system makes an unmistakable improvement in engagement and palpable presence in the music, along with revealing a decent amount more of subtle harmonic information, but not "distractingly" so, only musically consonant. Interstitial harmonics are suddenly present that weren't before, and it results in a much truer perception of the instrument or voice, a much more believable sense. I only infer that this is due to the grounding treatment lowering some distortion that caused a "fuzzing over" of this musical information.Thanks Ralph, but the question I was alluding to…
Is what made jbrrp1 believe the bolded part.
Or maybe… are you are saying that ^that^ is true because SETs do not have feedback, so they cannot have the “harmonic bifurcation”?
A funny aside about the impact of this, a variation on the old canard "even my wife could hear the difference!" My wife is disabled and pretty much just occupies the room directly above my dedicated basement audio den. I have a heavily treated ceiling to minimize acoustic transfer between floors (triple sheetrock layers with Green Glue, suspended by Isomax elastomeric bushings on steel hat channel). It does a really good job of keeping things quiet upstairs, unless I'm enjoying Black Sabbath at punishing levels. Well, I had just inserted the Tripoint stuff into the system and I noticed a cleaner, truer initial transient launch that made drums that much more believable to me. And my wife suddenly started texting me all too regularly to turn things down, because she was hearing the beat too much coming through this ceiling barrier. I would pull out my decibel meter to see where I was at: 78 dB! What the hell! But the transient peak that had been somehow smoothed over was now hitting higher, quicker, and truer to my ear. I believe that is the result of distortion being reduced. Could be because the ground potentials aren't interacting with the audio circuits so much when treated like this, as Ralph states.