Exactly. He has a "realist" view of all this audiophile nonsense, which I try to keeep, also. I am also intrigued by the journey to remove one last non-musical resonance from my system, so I back slide a bit, at times, into further exploring those "illusions", with technology. It seeems that what ever I do, I ride on alternating waves of good and bad, success and failure, brilliance and stupidity, courage and cowardice ...
Uh-oh...You're not one of those guys that spent $300+ for an IEC power cable because it sounds better, are you?
Uh, no.
I just meant that litttle waves of successses usually come after many waves of failures. I can't seem to "catch a wave" of brilliance or success and ride it. I don't consider most pricey cabling to be an excersize in advancing technology, but rather a way to extract hard earned money from uneducated, yet, blindly hopeful audiophools.
I'm a DIY guy. I made up my own braided and shielded IEC cables, from high grade seventy five ohm signal cable. I have learned that it is more important which direction, relative to the polarity of the lines of flux surrrounding the power transformer, the cables leave or enter the most dense part of the field. That holds true for signal cables as well as the power cables. I get that idea shot down, by people with more time on their hands than brains, quite often, though.
I have not found that to be true of speaker cables, however. Twisted speaker cables do seem to sound better, though, as long as they are copper. I really don't like the sound of silver speaker cables. Silver in the signal cables is not too bad, but they are definitely more crispy up top. Not to my liking, at all. Silver power cables are just a joke. I get plenty of rejection with the shielded cables. My amp is connected directly to the wall and the other items alll ground through the amp chassis. That means that the other signal cables all have lifted grounds at one end or the other, depending on the flow path to ground. The only continuous ground path, betweeen the equipment, is through the power cables.