Synergistic Red Fuse ...


I installed a SR RED Quantum fuse in my ARC REF-3 preamp a few days ago, replacing an older high end fuse. Uhh ... for a hundred bucks, this little baby is well worth the cost. There was an immediate improvement upon installation, but now that its broken in (yes, no kidding), its quite remarkable. A tightening of the focus, a more solid image, and most important of all for my tastes, a deeper appreciation for the organic sound of the instruments. Damn! ... cellos sound great! Much improved attack on pianos. More humanistic on vocals. Bowed bass goes down forever. Next move? .... I'm doing the entire system with these fuses. One at a time though just to gauge the improvement in each piece of equipment. The REF-75se comes next. I'll report the results as the progression takes place. Stay tuned ...

Any comments from anyone else who has tried these fuses?
128x128oregonpapa
mapman:

I appreciate that you have tried the RED fuse and hopefully have given it 75 to 100 hrs. to settle in. After this time has passed and if you do not think the sonic improvement is worth a $100.00 please send it back to Oregonpappa.

This is the beauty of the Synergistic Research Black and RED fuses. You get a long evaluation period and if you do not find the change worth the money send them back. Returning a non satisfying purchase is liberating. 

 I do think Geoff should order some Synergistic Black fuses and compare this latest technology to the older generation audio fuses and the use of no fuse at all. He is missing out on some new exciting technology.

nyame:

Thank you for the kind words. I have invested a lot of time evaluating the stock, SR-20, RED and now Black fuses in multiple components and systems. The Black fuses certainly have new technology in place that causes a greater positive change than the previous generations of fuses.
Having all the fuses replaced with Black fuses gives an improvement that is greater than a linear improvement.

To me the real important lesions of this thread are:
1. Try a device in your system that allows you to evaluate it for a significant amount of time and allows you to send it back with no "justification" necessary.
2. Become comfortable with critical listening.
3. Become comfortable sending demo's back that do not meet expectations.
4. Evaluate possible system improvements in some sort of systemic approach.
5. Have fun.
6. Allow others to have different opinions.
7. Be respectful of  other posters.

I hope all will take time to enjoy some music this week that not just makes the foot tap but also enriches the soul.

David Pritchard


Yes thanks to op for lending me the fuse.   It'll go back to him or I will pay him for it if I decide to keep it.   I should get some more listening time in this weekend. 
Dave it would take me a long time to put 75 to a hundred hours of burn in time on the fuse.   I typically get in a few hours a week of listening.   I do not leave the arc tube preamp on when not listening to save life of tubes.    I'll do the best I can though.  We will see.   The book is still open for me.  

Al's a bit of a fence sitter with things like this.

But to me these fuses are up there with Shaun Mook Mpingo pucks, very unexplainable things going on, can really **** with your head.


Cheers George

Georgelofi wrote,

"Al’s a bit of a fence sitter with things like this.

But to me these fuses are up there with Shaun Mook Mpingo pucks, very unexplainable things going on, can really **** with your head."

The Shun Mook Mpingo discs work by sympathetic resonance. So, it’s actually explainable. It’s not voodoo. It’s not pseudo science. No reason for all the angst and wringing of hands.

From the Shun Mook website:

"There is no real magic about our products. They are all based on simple high school physics - "Sympathetic Resonance". As all elements in this universe will resonate when like pattern energy is generated from another material. Just as in a physics experiment when you excite a metal tuning fork of say the "A" frequency and hold it close to another static "A" tuning fork. The result is that the second tuning fork will also get excited because same frequency energy is transferred through the air to cause the vibration."

Note to Davidpritchard. Re fuses, I thought we already went over this. I have no fuses or straight wires (fuse bypass) in my system. I.e., there is no fuse protection and no fuse protection necessary, and no provision for fuses or fuse holders. Thus the question I had put to you earlier in the thread: "Wouldn’t no fuse be better than any fuse, even a Black fuse?" Does that jog your memory? ;-)

geoff kait
machina dynamica
we do artificial atoms right




"But to me these fuses are up there with Shaun Mook Mpingo pucks, very unexplainable things going on, can really **** with your head."

This is where I find being generally disinterested in how this sort of thing works a true bonus.  I already have enough stuff ****ing with my head both professionally and as an unpaid volunteer elected official!  
""But to me these fuses are up there with Shaun Mook Mpingo pucks, very unexplainable things going on, can really **** with your head."

This is where I find being generally disinterested in how this sort of thing works a true bonus. I already have enough stuff ****ing with my head both professionally and as an unpaid volunteer elected official!"

More sympathetic I could not be. Have you tried Dr. Phil?

"I’m trying to think but nothing happens." - Curly

Question, there is a review in Positive Feedback of the SR Red Fuse, a very positive one I might add.  Here's the relevant paragraph for my question.

"The Synergistic Research Reference RED fuse is a horse of a different color. The basic design features proprietary alloy wire and end caps utilizing anti-resonant ceramic bodies. They are treated with 2,000,000 volts of electricity that Synergistic Research calls Quantum Tunneling. In addition, Synergistic Research claims that "a new treatment process applied exclusively to RED fuses realigns the crystal structure of both the burn wire and the end caps for a refinement in high frequency characteristics and improved timbre linearity"."

So, this begs the question, does Synergistic Research claim the Red Fuse is non-directional?  It seems to me that their "new treatment process applied exclusively to RED fuses (that) realigns the crystal structure" would make the RED fuse non directional. If that's true what all this about the letters S and R? Or does that S and R business apply only to the BLACK fuse? Furthermore, and this is really my question, regardless of what SR claims, is the RED fuse really non-directional, or is it directional?  Has anyone actually gotten to the bottom of this?

I have seven SR reds in my system that were placed in three phases, each of which sounded so right, I have not felt a need to flip them.  I would discount directionality on the reds in favor of a long break in period. 



If the fuses are directional and it matters, it should not be a mystery.

Do what OP suggested early on. If you have a question or issue go to the source (Synergistic Research) ask your question and let the experts resolve it.

If you find out anything new of interest, please share with others here.
By the way, Geoffkait--in looking at your MD site, I presume your intent is to amuse and educate audiophiles. I appreciate your inventiveness and humor. Just wondering though--if I were to add your teleportation tweak or the intelligent chips to my shopping cart, do you then say, "Stop--enough--I don't actually take your money or send you anything. It's all a hoax, meant to educate the naive." Or, do you really take my money to commit the ultimate scam?  You may want to start a new thread on this, or you may choose silence, but please--let's get to the bottom of MD and your real mission.   

" "Al’s a bit of a fence sitter with things like this. "

My guess is, as an obviously very accomplished, seemingly altruistic, unbiased and knowledgeable EE who loves music and audio, (not to mention a very precise thinker and communicator), Al would rather make decisions that are consistent with the technical facts. So the more facts to base things on the better to help jump off the fence.

Just my gut assessment....

By the way that combination of things is very hard to find. Congrats to Al’s parents!




To sum up: I estimate the manufacturing cost of the fuses to be about 2 to 5 bucks, they're sold for $99 or so, and for my entire system (really the only way to realize your full enjoyment potential) is into $700 to $1000 territory. So much for "cheap" tweaks. If they don't break in by keeping them passing electrons for 170 hours (about a month of lots of hifi), you likely have them in backwards or they're not for you. The fuses work their mojo regardless of the standard fuse holders made from arguably less "special" and likely "non directional" metal…the description of why these do their job so well are obtuse and don't truly make much sense to "thee of lessor faith," and most of the faithful don't care since their systems were booted into the higher level "free flowing water" these fuses allow…notwithstanding the power supply, less precious metals and wires, and other gizmo designs causing some rapids downstream, and the ridiculous profit margins realized by a company that actually sells expensive painted aluminum bits for tonearms is the American Way. You go SR…please.
Jafreeman wrote,

"I have seven SR reds in my system that were placed in three phases, each of which sounded so right, I have not felt a need to flip them. I would discount directionality on the reds in favor of a long break in period."

That's nice.  I actually don't blame you for ignoring the directionality issue. Sounding right is relative. Most audiophiles probably think their systems just sound right.  You don't actually see too many audiophiles saying, gosh, my system really sucks.

Jeeze Wolf.....congrats, only 1,000+ posts on this thread and you are already catching on. 
Yes, just buy them and try if interested. Return within 30 days if not floating your boat.

Is that the end of the thread maybe? What else really matters that has not been covered?

I guess we’ll find out. :^)

Maybe once we solve this problem we can all then move on to world peace.

Wolf, 8000000 volt burn in of a 500V rated fuse doesn’t come cheap. Imagine the electricity bill alone. Not to mention hazard insurance for the folks actually in charge.   Do they have that in China?

Namaste!
Post removed 
Jafreeman wrote,

"By the way, Geoffkait--in looking at your MD site, I presume your intent is to amuse and educate audiophiles. I appreciate your inventiveness and humor. Just wondering though--if I were to add your teleportation tweak or the intelligent chips to my shopping cart, do you then say, "Stop--enough--I don't actually take your money or send you anything. It's all a hoax, meant to educate the naive." Or, do you really take my money to commit the ultimate scam? You may want to start a new thread on this, or you may choose silence, but please--let's get to the bottom of MD and your real mission."

It's whatever you want it to be.  

Cheers,

geoff kait
machina dynamica
advanced audio conceits
Mapman, you should write a book, How to go from Fuse Pseudo Skeptic to Fuse Basher in 10 Easy Steps. 

Cheerios
jafree,

You got your answer.

Geoff,

Its Ok to have a sense of humor. No reason to get your undergarments in an uproar, as you often like to say.

   








Mopman wrote,

"Geoff,

Its Ok to have a sense of humor. No reason to get your undergarments in an uproar, as you often like to say."

If it’s OK, how come you don’t have one? And It’s not my undergarments that are in an uproar. Geez, you'd think someone gave you an atomic wedgie.  ;-)











Mapman, thanks so much for the exceedingly nice words!

I’ll add that I always enjoy, and not infrequently learn from, your invariably balanced, knowledgeable, and level-headed posts.

Also, I don’t disagree with George’s characterization of me as a fence-sitter when it comes to some controversial tweaks. Especially in cases such as this one where the seemingly implausible magnitude of the claimed benefit is supported by testimony from several members I consider to be particularly credible.

That said, my bias, to the extent that I have one, always tends to be in the direction of focusing my investments of time and money where I believe those investments are likeliest to be most beneficial. With that judgment being made based on both my own knowledge and experiences that are reported by others, which I try to calibrate based on who is doing the reporting, and on the apparent thoroughness of their experimental methodology. My perception is that you have a similar outlook.

Thanks very much again. Best regards,
-- Al

Some evidence, Exhibit A

from long time Synergistic Research dealer’s website,

"Synergistic Research has a new, ’top of the line’ addition to their highly regarded fuse lineup: the BLACK Fuse.

For best performance, fuses should be installed one way, listened to, and then reversed the other way to determine best sonic orientation."

to recap, the RED fuse is supposedly non-directional (according to SR?) by virtue of the special RED fuse only treatment that realigns the crystal structure or some such thing. We can come back to that claim later. The BLACK fuse on the other hand IS directional, but not marked for direction, apparently not even using the S and R approach, so the user must try it BOTH WAYS to see which way sounds best. Make sense?

Exhibit B - the same dealer states for the RED fuse:

"For best performance, fuses should be installed one way, listened to, and then reversed the other way to determine best sonic orientation."

So, is that the dealer’s suggestion or SR? You be the judge.



Geoff Kait
Machina Dramatica
Advanced Audio Concerts

I am of two minds on such topics, and wouldn't have it any other way. My education is in math/statistics and I have loved the career it gave me in logic.  So I can wear that hat, and that mind can remain cautious of magic, yet respecful of the sensitivities of my other mind as it stands at the amp, swaps directions of a SR Black, and immediately senses that something is off as I turn up the volume.

I have so enjoyed logic, but equally enjoy the endless mystery and beauty of perception, artistic expression, and emotions.  To require one to be right seems to limit the human experience.

As for the sub-thread on albums, I'm no jazz expert, but I find my new Hugh Masekela album "Hope" to be extraordinary, both sonically and musically.
I'm heading down to chill to some music now.  Will pop the red fuse back in and see what happens.  
Things are sounding really good. Some Neil Young Harvest Moon, Hair original Broadway soundtrack (one of my favorite bass guitar rock performances).   Now some opera on RCA Red Seal.  Awesome.   Squeezebox touch on random play so getting a nice random sample of my music library to listen to. 
Seal it in my heart and mind.  Johnny Cash performing before me on solo guitar.  Is he talking about the fuse?  🙏

Les Mis soundtrack now. Meh.  Never my favorite recording  but doing fine.  
Santa Clog.  Klezmer anyone?   Rough Guide series seldom disappoints.   Very nice.  Trench town rock by bob Marley.  Wailers on harmony vocals I think coming through nicely.  Bass line holding together nicely.  Fuses seem up to the task along with all the rest. 
Rhapsody on a theme by Paganini from Somewhere in Time soundtrack.  Very average recording but did not seem to matter. 

Temptations cant  get next to you.    A little closed in but convincing nonetheless. 

Soundstage is wall to wall about 22 feet or so and totally detached from speakers.    But that's par for the course for the Ohm F5s in my largest listening room which also happens to be L shaped. 

Im just listening and not mucking with changing fuses.  The red guy is in there sans quantum sticker thingy. 


Astro lounge by smashmouth.  Sounds very good.   Visi d'art from Tosca.  check.  Jet by PM and Wings.   A track I know well.    Not hearing anything radically different but sounds great as usual.  
As a person who has been immersed in commissioned sales most of his life, I never rely on logic. Its all seat of the pants for me. With that said, its amazing how one can acquire a sixth sense for reading people.

Mapman ...

If you decide to keep the fuse, you don't owe me anything. I intended it to be a gift ... and that's what I want it to be. If, on the other hand, you don't decide to keep it, just return it and I'll gift it to another friend. BUT ... please, stop moving it in and out of your system. Just keep in in there for at least 50 to 100 hours to re-break it in. I suspect that it laid dormant too long to sound correct right out of the box.

By the way, the Black fuses and the level three SR Atmosphere power cords have finally reached the point of break-in where the tonal balance and organic sense of instruments are really sounding correct now.  My friend Robert came over for dinner and a listening session last night and he raved about both the food and the music. The food? My home made Mexican    albondigas soup. Yum. Keep in mind that Robert is a real cynic and will tell you in a heartbeat if something doesn't sound right in your system. 

Happy listening ... 
Stones good times bad times.  Good times tonight I would say.  The music is sucking me in. 

Belshazzars feast on Rca red seal again. Orchestra and choral work and very good recording.  A nice challenge.  Again very ethereal. Lots to hear in this one. 

The Johnny Mann singers what the world needs now is love sweet love on readers digest melodies and memories collection.  You've never heard how good Muzak can sound off your daddy's radio.  Artificial stereo mixing in the recording but fools me who cares. 
Everything you want by vertical horizon off one of those now sampler CDs.  Very listenable.   No harsh edges.  If I close my eyes I might be fooled.  

You get the picture.  Things sound very good.  The fuse is definitely not embarrassing itself. 



Charlie Haden and Kenny Barron the very thought of you.  Fine recording just piano and upright bass.  I am there!
Ok now l via l viaquez by Mars Volta from Francis the Mute.   Here's some potential ear bleed material that might chase many out of the room.  It has its edge but nothing that probably should not be there in the first place.   This is rough but I'm surviving.   It's not the fuses fault.  Another just par for the course. 
Papa very kind of you. If I I keep the fuse which seems likely I will want to maybe I can send something your way to try in exchange.  I have some spare Ics and such sitting around. Plus various other things.   I'll contact you at some point soon to discuss. 
Smoky Robinson tracks of my tears from the wonder years soundtrack box set on laser light label.  Awesome. 
Finally for the night I'm queuing up seventh sojourn cd by the moody blues one of my favorites and a recording I know well.   I posted a review here years ago that's probably still around. 
Papa I always feel the vibe with my stuff running the big Ohm 5s.   Feeling it tonight as well.  Hifi is a team sport.  I'm throwing just under 20k at the music with this system.   The fuse is playing with the team very nicely.   How much it is contributing uniquely is still no easier for me to say.  But I like what I hear and would rather just listen than muck around with fuses as you advised. 
Almarg also thanks so much for your kind words.  I am beyond flattered that you find my posts and occasional ramblings helpful. 

Mapman ...

I'm convinced that the more highly resolving the system, the more impact these little fuses make. Are you noticing while listening to your Ohm 5 system that instruments have a more tactile organic presentation? Are you finding yourself more immersed into the music than is usually the case? Are you finding yourself listening to entire recordings/CD/vinyl/high-rez downloads, instead of jumping around from recording to recording and/or cut to cut? 
Love "Seventh Sojourn", have all seven on MoFi Gold, but like the latest issue, overseen by Justin Hayward.  Now playing: Dave Valentin's "Tropic Heat" on Grusin/Rosen Productions, one of the first labels to commit to all digital recordings in the '80s, recall "Harlequin" with Dave Grusin and Lee Ritenour. Fabulous CD sound from '85 and still available. 

OK, try this one for an experiment only, definitely not for long term for safety sake.

Make sure all is working fine and you grown used to how it sounds. Then remove the "red fuse" and bridge out he the fuse holder with some copper wire, you can even tack solder it on the outside of the fuse holder. It should sound the best, if anything at all.


Cheers George   

" Are you noticing while listening to your Ohm 5 system that instruments have a more tactile organic presentation?"

If there is a difference it is very subtle but this is as good a term for what I think I might be hearing different as any.   The thing is I am not really hearing a clear difference with recordings I am most familiar with.

 Are you finding yourself more immersed into the music than is usually the case?
I was immersed last night but usually am when I am relaxed and able to focus on the music and not other things.

Are you finding yourself listening to entire recordings/CD/vinyl/high-rez downloads, instead of jumping around from recording to recording and/or cut to cut? 

Not enough listening yet to say.   In general, sound quality hardly ever prevents me from listening to particular recordings.  I find most to be involving even if technically limited.  As long as no clear unintended distortion is there.   That was a big goal for me putting together my setup, to be able to listen to and enjoy all music.