Do no harm to a signal! Does this mean.....


So basic cables are harming the precious delicate analogue signal as it approaches a speaker.  

and how to avoid?  
Isnt this the reason for paying up for cables cause,its so hard to limit signal damage? Not about improving signal. So much damage going on.  

never dreamed how much i was harming the signal.  Does all this make sense???


jumia

Showing 2 responses by hilde45

I think the advice is "Do no harm to a good signal." Garbage in, garbage out?

Got a pig? Get some lipstick. (And a bottle of bourbon. Good times.)
Your premise isn't wrong, it's incomplete.

For example, if an inferior system is too bright, a cable can affect the tonality and, sometimes, improve it. That's not the ideal way to get good sound, but that's a way in which the cable adds something that improves the signal. It's like a mediocre spaghetti sauce; adding parmesan can't save it, but it makes it better, overall.