|
But Why? Expressing emotion, from beauty and delicacy to anger and
force is the raison d'être for music. |
||
|
A Budget A careful balance of long-term experience, both subjective
and objective, has shown there are a few key components that are responsible
for the degradation of a delicate audio signal as it passes through a
cable. |
||
|
Materials Matter An audio signal must pass a minefield on its way to an output
device. Everything that comes in contact with the signal has an effect
- sometimes desired, but very often not. |
||
|
High-grade IGL Copper conductors Copper is a wonderful conducting material, yet not all copper
sounds the same. A note on silver: Silver is a wonderful conductor, but subjective
differences in the silver available to cable manufacturers are often greater
than the differences between copper. Solid silver conductors can be virtually
transparent, but listen closely as poorly drawn silver can sound worse
than bad copper. One material to listen to, that will give a great education on the effect of materials on sound, is silver-plated copper. The discontinuity between the copper and silver, as well as the impurities that collect between these layers, are exactly where high frequencies are carried with great density. The effect is one that will have you reaching for ear plugs after short use -- or make you wish you played Bass instead. |
||
|
Solid Core Conductors Another source of distortion in cables is strand interaction.
Cables are stranded to provide flexibility. However, every strand in a
bundle is trying to carry the same audio signal as the strands next to
it. The problem arises given the fact that current running through any
single strand sets up a magnetic field. This magnetic field introduces
change to the signal carried in neighboring strands. The more strands
a conductor has, the worse the problem. When compared with a solid conductor
of equal cross-sectional area, a stranded conductor obscures micro-dynamics
and adds an edge to the sound similar to the distortion caused by low-purity
copper. In addition, mid-bass and lower frequencies lose their sense of
impact and articulation. Bass lines with stranded conductors are "fat"
and slow, with obscured harmonics in comparison to bass conducted through
a solid core cable. |
||
|
Conductor Size The phenomenon of skin effect causes high frequencies and low frequencies to be carried with different current densities relative to a position on the conductor - notably the outside skin of a conductor. While there are various formulae and theories as to how skin effect applies (or doesn't) to the audio spectrum in cables, empirical listening tests have shown clear differences in conductors of different size (all else being equal). Once a conductor is larger than 18awg, high frequencies tend to lose their sense of "air" or ambience. When overcoming resistance in speaker level applications requires the use of a conductor larger than 18awg, the only acceptable solution is to use several 18awg or smaller conductors separately insulated from each other to avoid strand interaction. |
||
|
Symmetrical Design Audio is alternating current, hence it passes through the
negative conductor at the same time as the positive one. A common way
for cable manufacturers to reduce their cost, is to use the shield as
a conductor. Shields are important for keeping interference out of the
conductors, but they don't conform to the requirement of a good audio
conductor by being solid, as well as symmetrical with the positive conductor. |
||
|
Insulation Material Now that we've got the audio signal on the right path, it's
important to consider that a great deal of the signal uses the conductor
as a wave-guide and travels on the edge and outside of the conductor as
a magnetic field. The ideal insulator would be to have none, yet this
is impractical for obvious reasons. Instead, a material must be chosen
that causes minimal change to the signal as it passes through it. |
||
|
Geometry How the conductors are run end-to-end relative to each other
and the shield will yield a capacitance value for a cable. |
||
|
Shielding Now that we have a signal path to minimize distortions caused
by the cable itself, it is important to protect the signal from external
noise with a proper shield. |
||
|
Solder Details matter. Solder is not a very good conductor, and each type has a sonic signature. Evidence Audio uses Wonder Solder from TRT, which uses a proprietary blend of materials resulting in a benign sonic signature. |
||
|
Plugs Neutrik manufactures the plugs used on the Lyric. The base metal used is sonically benign, and the nickel plating does a good job of protecting against corrosion. While gold plating has a higher perceived value than nickel plating, gold offers no conductive advantage to nickel in this context and is not worth the additional cost. |
||
| Design philosophy aside, the true value of any performance-based product is in the listening. We encourage you to develop the expertise that we have by spending time with your ears as much as your mind. Change one variable in your set-up at a time, and listen to the effect. You will learn to trust your ears and end up with the best collection of equipment to express yourself with. We've done the same with our cable, and it represents our passion for connecting with your music. |