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Quality Connectors & Cables
March 26, 2002
There has been many controversies about the type of cables that you should use on your home high fidelity stereos. It has been recommended for decades that you should use the minimal shortest and equal lengths cables from your power amplifiers to the speakers. If this has such a great effect on the power transfer; why shouldn't it effect the musicality that a person listens too? Many cable and terminal manufactures are around for this very same reason. Each one has their own principal theories and techniques on how a cable should be built and designed. WireWorld states that the most audible cable distortion is caused by the electromagnetic interaction which in turn distorts the music signals. Wireworld's patented "symmetricoax cables" design controls and minimizes these distorted listenable sounds, and brings the cleaner, clearer, and more dynamic signals. Either it be signals between your sources to your pre-amplifier, or the power amplifier to your speakers. Each individual cable plays its important roll of delivering the sound of music that we all love to listen. To bring the full listenable musicality, a good connection is required. WBT is worldly famous among many audiophiles, cable manufactures and designers. WBT's technology is based on a compression connection rather than just a soldered connection. "WBT advantage of "crimping produces a physically chemically optimum contact point with low transition resistance, which ensures pure signal transmission. Crimping is a cold-welding technique for which a heat supply is not necessary. The technique is easy to apply, and easy to fit (and re-fit) in WBT connectors." "Crimping is a cable connection technique which has been employed for many years in a variety of technical fields. In terms of contact quality, crimping is superior to soldering and far easier to do - provided that the plug connectors are of suitable design. WBT has created a whole range of crimp connectors and was the first company to apply this technique in the audio sector."
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