Duelund conversion to DIY Helix Geometry Cabling


I have been an avid user of the Duelund cabling for over two years now and have used them exclusively in my system with great results. I have built many for friends and have used a full loom of interconnects, speaker cables, power cords and an extensive wiring modification for a previously owned balanced power conditioner utilizing Duelund 600V PolyCast wiring which was transformative. My cabling desires can be a little addictive as I have owned and evaluated 40+ brands of cabling costing more than an entire stereo system!

Over the past six months I stumbled upon a thread here on Audiogon in regards to a Helix designed cabling and as you probably already know, I just had to look a little deeper into this cable design…After a month of studying and sourcing parts, I decided to reach out to the designer/architect, Williewonka who gave more insights and philosophy on how the cable came into existence.

That conversation got the ball rolling in converting one of my KLE Duelund interconnects to Steve’s Helix designed which only entailed replacing the neutral with a Mil-Spec 16 AWG silver-plated copper wire with the neural wire being 3 times longer than the signal wire and of course the “Coiling” of the neutral wire : )

After the modification was complete, I was not sure what to expect from the Helix cabling but I was quite shocked with the results with “ZERO” burn-in time…The sound stage became much wider/deeper with a much tighter/focused image and clarity/transparency is like nothing I have ever heard in any cabling regardless of cost. In fact, I just sold a full loom of a commercially designed Helix Cable that’s renowned around the world and has more direct sale than any cable manufacturer; these $200 DIY Helix Cables walked all over them…

I believe you will hear the same results as I have and have heard back from friends who have already modified their Duelunds with the same results; WOW! Remember the cables will need 200+ hours to burn-in and settle into your system. My system is now 90% DIY Helix to include IC, SC, PC and Coax with each cabling adding its beauty of an organic and natural presentation that draws you into the fabric of the music.

You can tailor the sound of your cables using Duelund, Mundorf silver/1% gold, the outstanding Vh Audio OCC Solid Copper or Silver with Airlok Insulation or your favorite wiring and you can change it at any time…

 

http://www.image99.net/blog/files/category-diy-cables.html

https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/difference-in-sound-between-copper-and-silver-digital-cables

https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/adding-shielding-to-existing-cables

 

Enjoy,

Wig


128x128wig

@camrector very glad to hear you are liking the Helix AIR cables 😀

Sorry to hear that you are encounting issues with sourcing the OCC wire.

Personally I use any f the folowing companies

  • parts connecxion bare OCC copper and OCC siver wire
  • neotech OCC copper wire from a couple of different sources - but it must state that it is OCC 
    • Sonic Craft
    • HiFi Collective
  • VH Audio OCC copper and silver aire with Airlok insulation

I have compared the wire from all of the companies above to the more affordable OFC wire and can confirm that the wire exhibits the faster dynamic perofrmance that OCC wire provides.

Here is a link to the Parts connexion wires threy currently have

Unfortunately, they do not curently stock 12, 14, 16 gague sizes, but that can change

Other sources, e.g. ebay, alibaba etc.. I do not trust.

When investing in OCC wire I would rather pay a premium from a "trusted source" rather than gamble on pay a little less from an ebay merchant that may less scrupulous .

The Helix AIR geometry will perform extremely well using OFC copper in terms of noise floor and clarity, but it wil lack in terms of details and dyanmic performance compared to the same cables that employs OCC wire.

For your speaker cables you might want to try the following

  • for the signal wire: 2 x 14 gauge bare OCC wire inside teflon tubes
    • each wire is inside its own teflon tube
    • basically the AIR geometry
    • use a tighter twist - one twist every inch
  • for the neutral wire: use the same wire gauge/geometry
    • but twist the wires in the opposite direction
  • insert each assembled conductor in its own cotton sleeve
  • insert the two conductors in an expandable sleeve to keep things tidy

This will ensure the conductors will perform welll in a balanced scenario

Regards - Steve

 

@williewonka

I’m not having any issues sourcing OCC. Neotech is found like you said at a few places.

I think you missed my point entirely. I’ll rephrase.
If the wire didn’t come from the Wan Lung and Wan Lung factory only, then it is not OCC. No other factories in the world have the license to manufacture the OCC patent. One can buy whatever it is that Parts Connection and VH audio from a few different factories in China. But it is not produced by Wan Lung and therefore not official OCC. Wan Lung produces Neotech

I would not trust your “trusted sources” products that are not Neotech.  I’m not saying that they are being deceptive on purpose. But what I’m saying is that only one factory in the world (Wan Lung) currently produces true licensed OCC. They do not supply bare wire, they do not supply anything with “Airlock insulation”. Other factories do and call it OCC but it isn’t.

@camrector - I’m not disputing your claims, I was just pointing out that the wire that is sold as OCC copper by my "Trusted sources" performs significantly better than OFC copper and even Mundorf solid silver wire and therefore would provide the performance I was observing

I think going forward and for the purpose of this thread that the wire that is being marketed as OCC wire by companies like Neotech, whilst they may not be actual OCC wire in the true sence, the term OCC is understood in the audio community as identifying a wire of a higher quality (i.e. superior to OFC copper)

FWIW - the bare OCC wire I purchased from Parts Connecxion actually performed a little better than the Neotech wire when used in an identical Helix AIR cable, where the Neotech cables had been stripped of it’s insulation.

Perhaps the improved perofrmance was due to it’s 6N rating as opposed to the Neotech 5N rating. No idea where they get it from, but it is a very good wire indeed

Just from a pure interest perspective

  • where did you happen to find this information - I would like to read more
  • Who does Wan Lung sell their wire too?
  • Do they make wire for the audio market?

Many Thanks - Steve

@williewonka 

Research and phone calls. 
OCC stands for Ohno Continuous Cast. It’s a patented manufacturing process. 
Any manufacturer can (buy) license the patent, buy the appropriate equipment, and produce copper wire and call it OCC. One can look online at the patent and see who has licensed it and when they have licensed it. 
Wan Lung is the only factory that has a current license. They produce the wire for Neotech and Harmony. They will make wire for anyone if you purchase enough of it 
Then print your name on it. 
 

https://www.wanlung.com.tw/email.htm

 

@williewonka 

here is a list of Dr. Ohnos patents. The most often quoted patent is
4605056 issued in 1986, where he describes in detail the actual casting apparatus.

Continuous metal casting – Atsumi Ohno
Patent number: 4515204
Filing date: Dec 14, 1982
Issue date: May 7, 1985

 

Process and apparatus for the horizontal continuous casting of a metal molding – Atsumi Ohno
Patent number: 4605056
Filing date: Jun 13, 1984
Issue date: Aug 12, 1986

 

Method of producing a metallic member having a unidirectionally solidified structure- Atsumi Ohno
Patent number: 4665970
Filing date: Nov 20, 1985
Issue date: May 19, 1987

 

Process for continuous casting of metal ribbon – Atsumi Ohno
Patent number: 4789022
Filing date: Mar 18, 1988
Issue date: Dec 6, 1988

 

Method for horizontal continuous casting of metal strip and apparatus therefor- Atsumi Ohno
Patent number: 5074353
Filing date: Nov 23, 1990
Issue date: Dec 24, 1991