Reviewing the fabulous Silversmith Fidelium Speaker Cables


If I like a product, I tend to hold onto it for a long time.
Take my stereo gear for instance.
I’ve had my Hales Signature System Two Speakers for almost 30 yrs.
I love the sound, imaging and soundstage they produce and I have no intention of ever letting them go.
The same situation is with my speaker cables; the venerable Straightwire Maestros. But in this case I knew that I would eventually upgrade them.
Both components have always been a tad bright, even with all-tube Amp, Pre Amp and CD Player on the front end.
After many years of constantly tweaking, I hit upon a combination which helped alleviate almost all of the glare.
Namely, a complete front end of ModWright products.

The only “problem” remaining was a time smearing element to the sound.
Fast piano and bass notes were not quite up to snuff in their separation.
Also, if I turned up the volume too much the sound would exhibit a bit of glare and the soundstage would tend to collapse.

I had long been a fan of Magnan products and currently use their interconnects and AC power cables in my system.
I’ve been looking for their speaker cable on the cheap for a while now.
I thought their approach to reducing skin effect signal doubling and phase issues would help in the articulation of fast consecutive notes (or sounds).
Plus I still had that tiny bit of brightness that needed a final taming.

I recently stumbled upon a glowing Sound Advocate review of the Silversmith Fidelium Speaker Cable.
www.thesoundadvocate.com/2020/06/silver ... st-review/
It actually was one of the finest cable reviews I had ever read.
There was great detail coupled with a ton of enthusiasm.
Like the Magnan, it utilized a thin ribbon to reduce skin effect anomalies. Plus, it used no termination products. (a BIG deal as far as I was concerned)
There were separate + and – leads for each speaker.
A “U” notch was cut into each cable end to interface with the Amp and Crossover.
I thought this was novel and highly desirable.
I called the owner, Jeff Smith and we discussed his cable at length.

One important item was that the Hales Speaker uses an external crossover with the capability to bi-wire.
This option was highly desirable to me so I broached this subject with Jeff.
He strongly recommended that I do so. Although not a deal breaker, the fact I would have to buy double the amount of cables was a bit of a concern.
Jeff replied two cable runs were not necessary and had a unique alternative configuration.
Namely, short Fidelium Crossover Jumpers with a simple but effective interconnect device right at the jumper’s midpoint where the long single speaker cable would connect.
His opinion was that this setup was as good as the traditional bi-wire method.
So just a 6’ set of speaker cables and a 1’ set of jumpers would be required.
I ordered the cables and patiently waited for their arrival.

Upon arrival, I was amazed at the light weight of them, which is understandable since the foil is less than 1/1000” thick and 2.25” wide.
The actual securing of the cables to an Amp or crossover binding post was a bit of a challenge, but not too bad.
The cable ends can be bent to fit into tight places, although there possibly are a few binding post configurations where connection would be very difficult.
Jeff told me that in a couple of months there would be finished adaptors available for those with fully plastic encased binding posts. He has been producing these adaptors by hand for those customers who needed them.

I turned on the system. No warm up.
Put my ear close to each driver. Absolute silence.
With no warmup, I slipped a CD into the player and listened.
The resultant sound was certainly very different than I was accustomed to.
Great detail but in a non fatiguing manner.
A beautifully balanced frequency spectrum.
Great Highs which were hash free.
Great tight Bass with accurate pitch and timbre.
Crisp, clear and sweet Mids.
Fast transient response, but not etched.
Very low noise floor. In fact, no noise at all.
I was excited that the Fideliums sounded so good with no system warmup.
With about an hour of warmup, I was ready for some serious listening.
All the attributes I previously heard were present but heightened.
The soundstage was deeper and wider than I had ever experienced.
The imaging was pretty incredible.
Each instrument could be easily localized and followed, without interference from another in the same proximity.
Really spooky!

But there was something else that REALLY set this cable apart from anything I had previously experienced.
The leading edge of each note (or sound) was wonderful, but it turns out the trailing edge and decay reproduction is incredibly super accurate. I mean SOTA!
IMO, this is the most important quality this cable possesses and sets it apart from all other speaker cables designs.
Distortions due to skin effect are vastly minimized.
Because of this, time smear/phase artifacts are virtually eliminated.
Fast piano and bass notes are truly distinct from each other.
Low level signals were readily discernable.
Echoes and decays of instruments was positively other worldly.

Because of these characteristics, I was able to turn the volume up to higher levels.
With my previous cables, the soundstage would collapse and the sound would harden up if I pushed them too hard.
Fideliums showed no such problems.

In the editors comments from the Sound Advocate review, it was mentioned how accurately this speaker reproduced the sound of a piano. I can vouch for that. In spades.
The depth and power of the bass notes are just plain ridiculous.
And the highest treble notes have a real body to them, not thin and tinkly.
I would like to add brass, drums and percussion to the list of “scary real”.
And again, that decay...

In closing, the sound you’ll experience from the Fidelium will be totally different than you’re accustomed to. It’s kind of unnerving until you live with it a while. Nothing stands out. Everything is in perfect balance. It’s KILLER!

If you click on the Silversmith website there are numerous testimonials from other satisfied customers.
As you can deduce, I’m 100% sold on this product.
I cannot recommend Silversmith Fidelium Speaker Cables highly enough.  

eichlerera

Showing 1 response by desalvo55

Just received my 10ft Fidelium speaker cables. So here's my 20 cents (inflation).

To start with, I was wondering how much break-in was needed on these cables. So I did a search which led me to this forum. I don't post much due to thin skin. As I read through the posts I noted Ozzie's experience, a members ears that I trust over the years and wondered if it related to what I was hearing in this my initial listening experience.

I have a new room (new house) and few room treatments. The room is dramatically different sounding than my former room. Bass is very well controlled despite no bass traps. My speakers sound amazing (they had in homes before) while I have on order another set of speakers. Maybe I'll cancel that order.

What led me to the ribbon cables was having the opportunity to listen to the Verastarr's ribbon speaker cables, their top of the line for a few months. I have listened to many a cable over the decades and had settled on Synergistic Research Tesla's which bettered so many other cables I've lost count. It was only  the Zero Audio Disclosures that barely unseated the Tesla's (which I still own and will swap in). 

The 20 cents amateurish review is because I'm still getting settled in and my wife hasn't had a chance to listen in. She had big discerning ears. My 11 year old who has suffered through my obsession's likes the sound on the one song her listened to FWIW. 

Swapping in the Fidelium's the first thing that struck me was how similar they sounded to my Zero's. I had to sit and listen to discern any differences other than perhaps it seemed I needed more volume to match the Zero's. I was not initially impressed. With the Verastarr's, I was very much impressed, but they were run in so give it time De Salvo.

After a few songs I left the room to see what break-in time was needed and...  here I am.

Upon listening to my audiophile play list music was happening, dynamic, detailed, very well controlled bass if a little light and highs that were a touch strident. Usher diamond tweeter don't create stridency, they simply don't perform bad notes but not having room treatment perhaps created a bit of "bounce". Noted. Vocals were very well displayed and well focused although a bit 2D (room treatments lacking). Ozzy noted lack of dynamic range so I focused on the difference in cables concerning that and thought bass maybe a little light but did not note a roll-off or lack of extended highs but more listening would be needed. 

At about the 3 hour mark there appeared to be more cohesion. It was playing well when I decided to swap back in my Zero's. 

Interesting, the Zero's seemed to be tighter focused but lacked the wide soundstage. Bass seemed to dig lower but something wasn't right overall. Mind you I'm playing through my musical tastes, Radiohead, Jennifer Warnes, B-Tribe, Pearl Jam, Chris Jones, I'm all over the place trying to get a sense of what's going on between these 2 very fine speaker cables.

I wanted to add the Tesla's but I'm getting older and sadly (or not) just want to listen to music and not constantly analyze the crap out of everything. Oh, and I still will!

Back went the Fidelium. Immediately, I noted the soundstage had increased. Bass was there as well. Both cables have the ability to catch the bass guitar as a separate instrument. I want to follow the notes of the musician playing bass. If I can't, I'm not happy. Playing B-Tribes "La Grappa" forced an increase in volume. B-Tribe will test your systems bass and strangely, in my new room, bass was far more controlled than any room I've had in at least 20 years. Weird, no bass traps.

Looks like for my tastes, the Fidelium cables are an amazing value. I'm pretty sure the Verastarr's were better but at 5 times the price. That's the price of our hobby.