Serious Question About Silver vs Copper Conductivity for Power


Yes, I realize that this topic is going to bring out the sharks, but if I get at least one serious response, it will all be worth it.

I understand that silver conducts 7% faster than copper.  I also understand that using a dielectric insulation like Teflon is best at keeping the wire from overheating, stopping signals entering and stopping signals from leaving the conductor. I understand that a certain amount of math is involved in selected gauge of wire depending largely on how much power the component is going to take, and how much the amperage is (20 or 15).

My question is regarding certain features applied to either silver or copper conductors that may or may not have an advantage over one or the other.

I have the Kimber Kable P14 Palladian.  This uses 14awg copper conductors insulated in Teflon.  Then it adds a massive filter that attempts to mitigate the standing wave ratio to as close to 1:1 as possible. I had Kimber’s Ascent power cable prior.  It’s identical to the Palladian, except the filter. I have heard the difference between using those two cables.  Apparently, mitigating the standing wave ratio lowers the noise floor significantly. However, any filter that chokes the signal and will slow the electrical current.

As I understand it, the amplifier works by opening the rectifier to allow the capacitors to fill with energy that the system will draw from.  Being able to keep the rectifier open and fill the capacitors as fast as possible, reducing lag time, has the effect of creating more realistic and detailed sound.

With that said, changing to a power cable that uses pure silver insulated in Teflon, will ensure that power is delivered potentially faster.  Although, the silver power cable will NOT have a filter.  Therefore the standing wave ratio will not be mitigated and the electrical signal will not be choked either.

So, would the amplifier benefit from faster electrical current or slower, but cleaner electric current?  Since this signal isn’t directly applied to sound, the concepts of “colder” or “warmer” sound should not apply.

Can someone help me out without poking fun at the question?  Additionally, I am not interested in having a cable-theory debate.  If you don’t believe cables make any difference, I will not debate or have discourse on that topic.


 

128x128guakus

@guakus

I must be very important to you all for you to spend so much of your energy attacking me. Knowing you have absolutely no control over me, must be infuriating.

hey buddy lighten up... i am not attacking you, just making a little joke, spread a little laughter on the forum

to be honest, i don’t know you, truly don’t care enough about this topic nor you, to want to ’attack’ anything... though i would say as i read through this thread your demeanor reeks of immaturity

this is a hobby we are invested in to have fun, right?

I must be very important to you all for you to spend so much of your energy attacking me. Knowing you have absolutely no control over me, must be infuriating.

You misconceptions are what is being questioned, so do not confuse that as some an attack on you.

But you are taking this way more personally than I would have thought to be rationally possible.

Hello 

This is my first post in audiogon forums.

I don’t have tons of experience but the other day a dealer lend me a nordost TYR 2 power cable that costs around 5k. I connected from wall to my torus power conditioner and sounded really flat, no dynamics no musical and little bright, this model conductors are OFC copper silver plated.
Then I connected again my Shunyata delta v2 again and the dynamics and great detail returned to music. So the material and the purity of the conductor  is really important, for me occ copper is the way to go, but I really want to test the Acoustic Zen gargantua II power cord with occ copper and occ silver 9AWG conductors.

Please if anyone have some experience with them will be awesome to read because is a mix of both worlds. Thanks 

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