amorris@home said:I have a buddy who was having trouble with his digi 002 losing the 1394 bus. I found that the weight of the Monster firewire cable connector was pulling down on the cable creating bad contact. I replaced it with a whatever cable I happened to have (old, very used, and NOT a GOOD cable, but very light, I wouldnt have used only to try it) and he's been fine ever since.
amorris@home said:I have a buddy who was having trouble with his digi 002 losing the 1394 bus. I found that the weight of the Monster firewire cable connector was pulling down on the cable creating bad contact. I replaced it with a whatever cable I happened to have (old, very used, and NOT a GOOD cable, but very light, I wouldnt have used only to try it) and he's been fine ever since.
amorris@home said:I have a buddy who was having trouble with his digi 002 losing the 1394 bus. I found that the weight of the Monster firewire cable connector was pulling down on the cable creating bad contact. I replaced it with a whatever cable I happened to have (old, very used, and NOT a GOOD cable, but very light, I wouldnt have used only to try it) and he's been fine ever since.
The infamous saying "bits is bits" can be found all over the web. Without many many vocal audiophiles out there dispelling the myth, it continues to snowball.
A critically important part of this cable is Kimber's use of a high performance nitrogen-infused polyethylene (PE) dielectric on the signal conductors to maximize signal integrity.
Sredna said:If you do it yourself the axe must be demagnetized!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pU2iKE-mH-M
Emperor Tomato Ketchup said:
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