Saturday, April 2, 2011

ODYSSEY AUDIO



by Alfred Huntchcock*
http://www.odysseyaudio.com/
A great percentage of domestic music reproductive systems are grossly implemented, producing only a small amount of their capabilities. As a result, their owners, unhappy, start out never ending processes of changing components. Each “increment“, very often, represents much more a waste of money than any real improvement in sound. In fact, a reproductive music system, to be great, depends much more on how it was assembled, as opposed to how much money was spent in the process.
Energy quality to begin with: there’s no great song in the absence of decent energy, no matter how much cost its respective electronics. Faulty energy is socialist: no matter its origin, the amount of money spent to acquire it, its importance or fame; your equipment will sound thin, disembodied, lifeless, and shallow. So, never take energy for granted. Go to as far as possible to get it right.
You can begin with by throwing away each and every general purpose power cables you have. It’s nothing short of extraordinary the improvement a good power cord can do, and, as a general rule, the heavier, the better. You can spend from 50 to 2.000 bucks in a single cable and, accordingly to which and how assembled your equipments are, the amount can represent a real bargain in view of the improvements it brings.

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