Yup - I'm working on that. I need the wife to help as the STEALTH has the tunable collar so she'll need to move it for me while I am in the listening position.A report on how it compares to the Siltech would be interesting!
Hi - fair question.Synaxis how come you disconitinued this report, i'm highly curious to know how the Stealth Audio Dream Petite are and also i'm not sure which Siltech speaker cable you had before them and what these are like versus them.
"Until death do us...tune loudspeaker cables".Yup - I'm working on that. I need the wife to help as the STEALTH has the tunable collar so she'll need to move it for me while I am in the listening position.
Long ago, when I didn't understand that my obsession about gear was not shared by my wife (talk about naive!), I asked her to help me compare two speaker cables. It was successful in that she preferred the ones I did, but she let me know that was the last comparison she would be doing."Until death do us...tune loudspeaker cables".
I agree with you that at the end of the day it's about the emotional connection with the music. The journey of experimenting though for me is certainly part of the fun.Long ago, when I didn't understand that my obsession about gear was not shared by my wife (talk about naive!), I asked her to help me compare two speaker cables. It was successful in that she preferred the ones I did, but she let me know that was the last comparison she would be doing.![]()
She just wants to listen to music. It was a good lesson for me. Keep eyes (ears) on the prize and don't get bogged down.
It is interesting that I tend to think of my setup as fairly static. But that really reflects how long I've had my speakers and amps (and most of the cables). In reality, I've experimented quite a bit over the last three years (and that includes acoustic treatments). And yes, it is fun (except when I burn out on burn in). How else do we learn in an optimal setting (that is, home setup)? You are clearly having fun...I agree with you that at the end of the day it's about the emotional connection with the music. The journey of experimenting though for me is certainly part of the fun.
I like the trial and error.It is interesting that I tend to think of my setup as fairly static. But that really reflects how long I've had my speakers and amps (and most of the cables). In reality, I've experimented quite a bit over the last three years (and that includes acoustic treatments). And yes, it is fun (except when I burn out on burn in). How else do we learn in an optimal setting (that is, home setup)? You are clearly having fun...
those surprises, like the three switch magic, are so rewarding. I played with external grounding devices and didn't have much luck. But a relatively small device, plugged into a separate circuit from my hifi (!), which is on its own dedicated outlet, suddenly revealed that grounding alternatives can indeed have an impact (at least for digital setups). Just need to find the right one. The device is https://www.akikoaudio.com/en/products/product/akiko-audio-triple-ac-evolution-u-sI like the trial and error.
Even when I tested 15 cheap network switches two years ago and uncovered a trifecta of three of them could compete with $1,500 network switches, and the cost of the trifecta was $175.
That's the fun stuff for me. Even if something doesn't sound good - at least I tried it.
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