CRL/FIM Silver 4 foot power cables (3) with rhodium terminations in excellent condition! Price is for (1) cable.
Remember you must be logged in as a member to contact and purchase otherwise email has no link, this is to prevent scammers! $30 Discount and Free Shipping (48 CONUS ONLY) if you buy all (3) Cables! These are multiple gauge solid core copper conductors. My price includes free insured Ground shipping in 48 CONUS only, no International shipping! Remember you must be a member to contact and purchase! Also these cables compare very favorably to Shunyata, Cardas, and Harmonic Technology which I have had in the past and sold because the CRL/FIM cables performed better for my needs. Big robust sound with excellent detail which worked particularly well with large and small solid state and tube gear.
See my eBay 100% score for 264 transactions @ rs3Ltd under CRL/FIM on eBay! 8 rating is to be safe, see photos! These are my personal cables that I purchased directly from CRL that retailed for $615 per cable. Price is for (1) power cable. This is from a Positive -Feedback article in which Winston Ma founder of First Impression Music reveals some of the key concepts behind the design of his 9 solid core Copper conductor FIM power cords which were intentionally created to cater to the wide band Audio frequencies which comprise the Alternating Current that powers our Audio equipment... While details surrounding the original FIM (First Impression Music) power cords which later became CRL (Cable research Labs) are difficult to come by, Ma did share with me a few of the product's finer points at the 2008 CES Show. According to Ma, the cable's design concept began with using different, multiple gauge, solid-core conductors for different frequency ranges. Ma added that cable stiffness proved the limiting factor when selecting for instance, the ideal gauge for low frequencies ; a cable using a 10 gauge conductor would be virtually unbendable! Another key aspect of the cable's design (and resulting sound) Ma explained was the choice of the number of conductors used in the cable's return leg (not an unknown quantity among cable designers). Choice of conductor material came pretty much from much trial and error; Ma regularly travels back and forth between the US and the Far East, allowing him to bring back samples of many different types of copper wire. Each wire sample was auditioned and the best sounding cable was selected, regardless of the surrounding hype.
|