I've heard very noticeable differences with as little as 24 - 36 hours of burn time on a Mobie. I typically like to let cables cook for at least one week and longer if possible. Bob Crump has mentioned 30 days as being a "magic number" in his experience. Personally, i've cooked cables for a couple of months and still think that some of them have shown improvement after going back on for even more "burn time". The Kimber / Illuminati D-60 is one cable that takes a LONG, LONG time to really settle in, even on a burner.
As far as using a digital source feeding a DAC as a "burner", i don't know. The signal is fed at an RF frequency ( 2.822 MHz ), which is WAY above the audio range. It would be interesting to compare cables "broken in" on a burner and via the "digital link" method. I do agree that the digital signal may be of higher amplitude than what an interconnect would see as far as signal goes, but whether or not it is beneficial in break in would be anybody's guess. Personally, i do not know.
If you're willing to make up some adapters, you can literally use interconnects as speaker cables. I know of a few folks that have done this and they commented on how much "sonic smog" was removed when they re-installed them into the system as interconnects. Quite honestly, i would not expect much out of an interconnect as a speaker cable, but it might be a little surprising. Sean
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As far as using a digital source feeding a DAC as a "burner", i don't know. The signal is fed at an RF frequency ( 2.822 MHz ), which is WAY above the audio range. It would be interesting to compare cables "broken in" on a burner and via the "digital link" method. I do agree that the digital signal may be of higher amplitude than what an interconnect would see as far as signal goes, but whether or not it is beneficial in break in would be anybody's guess. Personally, i do not know.
If you're willing to make up some adapters, you can literally use interconnects as speaker cables. I know of a few folks that have done this and they commented on how much "sonic smog" was removed when they re-installed them into the system as interconnects. Quite honestly, i would not expect much out of an interconnect as a speaker cable, but it might be a little surprising. Sean
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