I count three relevant links posted above by Gene (plus one comical one),
I could post links to nay sayers from all over the Internet that think like you think too. That really doesn't mean anything. Factual data is not determined by getting a group of people together to vote their opinions on it and whatever the majority thinks is the way it is.
and anyone who thinks a piece of wire needs to break in does not, frankly, deserve the time of day.
Such statements like that certain speaks volumes about yourself. Anyone that doesn't believe what you believe can hit the road eh?
Here are my thoughts on the cable deal and then we can drop it. Debating it will go no where and is useless. The problem I see is more of attitude. That's the real problem, and you have demonstrated it very well.
I have put together plenty of speaker cables. There was a time that I have built an identical set. I used the same wire from the same spool and they got the same type of ends from the same bag.
I placed one set of cables in my system and played them for many weeks.
My initial thoughts were that they seamed a bit bright, edgy, sharp, and were hard to listen to. I didn't really care for the sound. Of coarse that character changed as more time was put on them. After many weeks of play they sounded pretty smooth.
So then one day after an hour or more of listening, I dropped the other set of cables into the system (the other identical pair). The sound was very different than the well burned in pair. It was harsh sounding, bright edged and fatiguing just like the other one was weeks before.
I'd also have to say that the differences were easy to discern.
Have I witnessed a difference in sound due to burn in on cables? Yes I have.
Now I don't tell this tale to prove anything. It doesn't mean that you or anyone else will notice the same things.
The point is this. Who are you to tell me that I can't hear? What makes you think that you or anyone else can tell someone that they don't deserve the time of day because they have experienced something that you have not.
The only thing that you can factually say is that you have not witnessed such.
You see, its the poor attitude that is the fuel for fire.
Now as to your questions:
If speakers break in, don't they also break-down?
There reaches a point in which they settle in and there is hardly any measurable differences due to extended play. You'll see 95% or more in the first 40 to 50 hours of play unless they are played very lightly and not worked hard.
Does the frequency response not continue to change over time?
Frequency response changes little over time and is hard to discern. Fractions of a db in amplitude are not really detectable. You really won't know whether you have even turned the volume control up to the exact same place twice.
How quickly? If not, why would it suddenly stop? Where are those measurements?
Again the burn in process has little to no effect on amplitude.
Look at it this way. I have two woofers that have different types of cone materials. They look the same through a given pass band where they are used. I mean that they measure the same. But they don't sound the same. The materials used are different and they have a slightly different sound. Most people will accept this.
Now I have two woofers that use the same cone material but the compliance is different. Funny thing is that they sound a little different too. It could also be that the compliance was the same before one was burned in a bunch.
Why aren't manufacturers selling extended warranties and opening up shops for replacing drivers after a period of time to keep the speakers within spec?
What makes you think that they are out of spec once they have burned in? This may be what is necessary to bring them into spec as fully burned in drivers were used in the design phases and voicing of the speakers.
Ok let's get back to the topic of speaker break in and put the cable snake oil debacle on hold for now.
Agreed. Let's have a look at what your buddy had to say.
It was pointed out that despite the mention that he "heated up the coil" he apparently didn't remeasure DCR while hot as he reports it as being the same in all measurements.
The voice coil is vented through the pole piece and through the frame. It also uses a Kapton former. It doesn't got hot like many voice coils would. But let's say it did get hot and it dropped the DCR from 5.6 to 5.5 ohms. This is practical.
DCR is of coarse a figure that one must input just like Sd.
Here are the figures from the test when measured hot with the DCR set at 5.6ohms.
Fs 48.2417
Fs Added Mass 23.8606
Added Mass 25.0000
Diameter 110.0000
Z F1F2 14.2580
Re 5.6000
Rms 1.2673
Qms 1.9365
Qes 0.3532
Qts 0.2987
Cms 1.3443
Mms 8.0965
BL 6.2377
VAS 16.9529
dBSPL 89.3374
L 1kHz 0.3228
L 10kHz 0.1809
SD 0.0095
Now here they are again with 5.5 ohms input.
Fs 48.2417
Fs Added Mass 23.8606
Added Mass 25.0000
Diameter 110.0000
Z F1F2 14.1302
Re 5.5000
Rms 1.2646
Qms 1.9407
Qes 0.3465
Qts 0.2940
Cms 1.3443
Mms 8.0965
BL 6.2411
VAS 16.9529
dBSPL 89.4204
L 1kHz 0.3228
L 10kHz 0.1809
SD 0.0095
Looks like very little change to me. This is nothing at all compared to the change from running the woofer for 20 hours.
Vas and Qts are synthetic quantities so we tend look at Mass and BL which should not change. Clearly his data are noisy as mass and BL did change.
My data are noisy?
BL is a force factor derived from motor strength and mechanical compliance. Change the mechanical compliance and you change BL. Therefore, burn in time effects BL as is well known.
Mass is not measured on a gravity scale. It is derived from a resistance differential. Change the resistance and you change the Mass. Resistance is changed by compliance changes. Compliances change with burn in. So Mass figures can change as well.
The change in FS he reports and some level of recovery is real. We often see FS moving around a bit depending on temperature and break in. Surround material and design makes a huge difference. Some materials and designs are very stable.
I agree. I wonder if the break in period he refers to is many hours (as do I) or if it is within the first ten seconds as this site supports?
Some materials are more stable from the get go and some go through a period of change in the early hours of burn in and then become very stable.
Hot voice coils heat the air in the enclosure, thus heating the cone and surround and changing their mechanical properties
This is true as well, but I did not burn my woofer in by playing it in an enclosure.
temporarily for the most part, but with the witches brew of materials used in paper cones, it is conceivable that there are instances where some of it could be permanent. For other cone materials, the effects are temporary (existing only while the material is hot), if they exist at all; which is why we look for cone materials that maintain similar mechanical properties over a wide temperature range.
A witches brew of materials. That was funny. I don't see cone material getting hot from a voice coil especially a paper cone. Paper is an isolator. Now a metal cone is a different story. Metals are of coarse a conductor of heat. Plus, changes seen in compliance are not from effects on the cone.
Measured changes in LF output as a result of all of this tends to be of the order of 0.5 dB around 50Hz. As I said, in a room this has to be close to or below the threshold of audibility, but since competent designs account for it, it is not an issue.
It can actually be several db of change, but I also agree that this is not the source of the changes in audibility.
So it appears to me that if you have a poorly designed paper cone then the extent of break in will be more pronounced.
Now my design skills are poor? This again shows ignorance, and is insulting. The woofer tested is a well known favorite in the audio community. Its performance is well in excess of its cost and it is highly regarded. It is also used by several other loudspeaker companies and was selected for its performance.
For what it is worth I have worked with drivers from nearly every major driver manufacturer in the business. Rarely do I see a higher level of QC than that of the driver that I tested. Other standouts would include the several hundred drivers that were built for me by Eton a few years ago.