Drew - the changes where quite noticeable and include...
- a larger image, mainly deeper and a little wider
- on some tracks the image now envelopes the listener, but the artist and
instruments are not forward - it's as though the venue acoustics project
further forward than before.
- micro details have improved the most noticeable is sibilance, which is
silky smooth and cymbals and triangles are much clearer and their decay is
longer, and let's not forget those really high violin notes that can come
across like nails on a chalkboard - they're very smooth now.
- dynamics have improved across the board, but I have noticed snare
drums, rim shots and tamborines are now very very crisp.
- there is a fullness or warmth to the overall sound which was lacking
before
- venue acoustics are much more noticeable, which for me makes the
music much more engaging
That is after about 100 hours burn in. The first hour was less impressive.
I notice different things with almost every track I listen to - like the details
of the guitar strings against a bottleneck in some delta blues slide guitar
tracks I have and the whispery texture of many female singers.
Orchestral pieces have a cavernous image and pipe organ music has
wonderfully textured bass notes that rattle the windows.
Now I hasten to add that this is on my system, which I believe to have very
good interconnects (solid silver single core teflon insulation) and I've
recently upgraded my power cables, which I found allowed many of the
more subtle details to be more easily heard.
Just to see if it was brain wanting me to think they were better - I
connected the DAC to the interconnects from the phono stage, which are
identical, but has the Silver Bullets on the source end - let's just say the
music sound thin and lifeless by comparison.
My previous RCA's were the original Eichman Silver Bullets - which I had
previously thought were pretty darn good.
The Copper Harmony is just better at everything - which took me
completely by surprise, so they are my new reference :-)
I will be writing a complete review on my blog next week - if you want the
link let me know
But pretty much you've got the "Coles Notes" version above
BTW the Copper Harmony retails at $60AUSSIE for a set of 4 and are now
silver coated.
Hope you find this useful :-)
- a larger image, mainly deeper and a little wider
- on some tracks the image now envelopes the listener, but the artist and
instruments are not forward - it's as though the venue acoustics project
further forward than before.
- micro details have improved the most noticeable is sibilance, which is
silky smooth and cymbals and triangles are much clearer and their decay is
longer, and let's not forget those really high violin notes that can come
across like nails on a chalkboard - they're very smooth now.
- dynamics have improved across the board, but I have noticed snare
drums, rim shots and tamborines are now very very crisp.
- there is a fullness or warmth to the overall sound which was lacking
before
- venue acoustics are much more noticeable, which for me makes the
music much more engaging
That is after about 100 hours burn in. The first hour was less impressive.
I notice different things with almost every track I listen to - like the details
of the guitar strings against a bottleneck in some delta blues slide guitar
tracks I have and the whispery texture of many female singers.
Orchestral pieces have a cavernous image and pipe organ music has
wonderfully textured bass notes that rattle the windows.
Now I hasten to add that this is on my system, which I believe to have very
good interconnects (solid silver single core teflon insulation) and I've
recently upgraded my power cables, which I found allowed many of the
more subtle details to be more easily heard.
Just to see if it was brain wanting me to think they were better - I
connected the DAC to the interconnects from the phono stage, which are
identical, but has the Silver Bullets on the source end - let's just say the
music sound thin and lifeless by comparison.
My previous RCA's were the original Eichman Silver Bullets - which I had
previously thought were pretty darn good.
The Copper Harmony is just better at everything - which took me
completely by surprise, so they are my new reference :-)
I will be writing a complete review on my blog next week - if you want the
link let me know
But pretty much you've got the "Coles Notes" version above
BTW the Copper Harmony retails at $60AUSSIE for a set of 4 and are now
silver coated.
Hope you find this useful :-)