Sorta on topic...
I receive the monthly mag "M" from Magnolia Hi-Fi here is Seattle; I think I qualified for the free subscription when I spent
x amount of dollars in their stores -- there has only been two issues so far. Don't get me wrong, this isn't intended to be anecdotal of buyers remorse, actually on the contrary I enjoy the great service I get there.
Anyhoo, the mag features full length pictorials (ooh, sounds dirty) on member systems that coincidentally
feature products that Magnolia carries. Some of the systems are breathtaking, but seriously there are plenty of members here whose systems put theirs to shame. They also do an industry "insider" look at certain companies, the first month featured the Pioneer Kuro line of plasmas, the current issue has a
great article on McIntosh with some neat pics of the assembly line and their in house anechoic chamber.
Here's the rub:
Both issues feature an "informative" article written by an industry insider explaining the ins and outs of HT for the common man. The first issue's article was written a Magnolia employee explaining the qualitative differences between LCD and Plasma panels; no big deal.
The second issue however, features an article by Bill Low (president of AudioQuest) titled "Why all HDMI cables are not the same". >groan<
I quote: "AudioQuest is also pushing the frontier of HDMI assembly technology, using
cold welding or
wave soldering to ensure secure, reliable connections between the cable and connector."
Ok ok, I know this is the company that sells cables with batteries for thousands of dollars, everybody knows that and that isn't the point here.
What is "cold welding" and "wave soldering", and what benefit if any does it have on the digital signal transmitted over HDMI?