More evidence that system building and synergy really are things.As I mentioned up the thread a bit, my encounters with silver wiring haven’t in the main been positive but I’m currently running my SPU Century through a 1:26 Sculpture A silver SUT and it’s not showing any of the negative characteristics I’ve come to associate with silver. That’s now two instances where I’ve found no obvious downside, the other being the Transfiguration Proteus. In both cases I haven’t made a direct comparison with copper, the 1:26 copper SUT is out of stock at the moment.
Dialectric. Yes it has dialectric, which is enamel, like motor winding wire. Litz wire is made from this design.My choices are pure silver or copper, four stands each 0.14mm thickness.
No dialectic.
That turned out to be completely false. Whatever sounds best is the interconnect that sounds best. There is no such rule in the universe. And it is impossible anyway. For example; Vacuum tubes are made of mostly copper, inside and out. Wall duplexes, house wiring, linear power supplies, source component circuit boards, to name a few, are not made of silver. If you go battery power, the batteries are not silver.I remember this question coming up at our Oregon Triode Society meetings 34 years ago. I do not "know" the truth to it, but recall the opinion of the other members was that if you use silver wire the entire system needs to be wired in silver, same if you use copper. Sonic difficulties don't always arise but when they do it has always been (in their experience) when wire constitution has been mixed. That was the accepted wisdom 34 years ago anyway.
Some of the best turntable setups I've heard, were ising Cardas products. Also a digital system with Sim Audio equipment, connected with Cardas cabling was outstanding, and easy to listen to at length.More evidence that system building and synergy really are things.
I've moved some simple Rollerballs isolation from under my TT motor controller, and my silver wired LP playback has lost quite a bit of exaggerated sharpness.
I'm still going to get Cardas Clear copper wire made up, but feel less compelled to investigate.
“without music life would be a mistake"(F. Nietzsche)]
You may also want to try Audio Note AN-WIRE-300 tonearm wire. I use it on my ET-2 linear tracking arm and it does not influence arm movement at all. It's incredibly thin and very challenging to work with. That's a ballpoint pen for scale.Thanks for your replies one and all.
I'm likely to try making up silver AND copper wire, and make a reasoned comparison over time.
Zavfino 1877 Litz for silver, and this or Cardas Clear or Alphason OCC for copper.
I have overriding priority for the thinnest "not there" wire possible since this lash up will need to be one piece from cart pins to Straingauge energiser, and my air bearing LT arm must encounter no drag from this wire, thus precluding thicker, stiffer wire like Kondo.
The Kondo silver tonearm wire consists of four strands of 0.09mm silver wire. It can be used in its stock form, with all four wires stranded together, or untwisted, allowing each extremely thin wire to be used individually.I have overriding priority for the thinnest "not there" wire possible since this lash up will need to be one piece from cart pins to Straingauge energiser, and my air bearing LT arm must encounter no drag from this wire, thus precluding thicker, stiffer wire like Kondo.
The Kondo silver tonearm wire consists of four strands of 0.09mm silver wire. It can be used in its stock form, with all four wires stranded together, or untwisted, allowing each extremely thin wire to be used individually.
View attachment 142609
Each thin wire is varnished separately, providing insulation. If you choose to use the wires untwisted, you can wire four tonearms instead of one.
I rewired a couple of tonearms with standard 4 strands which were previously wired with 1 strand. Not a night and day difference but 4 strands sound fuller, bolder. By standard I mean Kondo silver tonearm wire.Hi mtemur, I am planning to rewire my Rockport linear tracking arm with the Kondo silver wire. I am thinking of using just a single run, ie the four strands of 0.09mm would do all the left, right, +, -, to minimize drag. But I worry whether such thin wire would compromise the signal. I wonder whether you have any experience comparing the single run vs quad run? For reference, I believe the Kuzma Safir uses quad run of the Kondo silver wire.
Thanks
The inductance of the Linz wire is achieved geometrically.Hi mtemur, I am planning to rewire my Rockport linear tracking arm with the Kondo silver wire. I am thinking of using just a single run, ie the four strands of 0.09mm would do all the left, right, +, -, to minimize drag. But I worry whether such thin wire would compromise the signal. I wonder whether you have any experience comparing the single run vs quad run? For reference, I believe the Kuzma Safir uses quad run of the Kondo silver wire.
Thanks
![]() | Steve Williams Site Founder | Site Owner | Administrator | ![]() | Ron Resnick Site Owner | Administrator | ![]() | Julian (The Fixer) Website Build | Marketing Managersing |