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jimtranr 11-12-2017 05:11 PM

Electra 7 Power Cord Feeding a TEAC UD-501 DAC
 
Bottom Line for those averse to TMI (this is a looooong essay):

The vast majority of upgrades I’ve installed in my audio systems over the years have effected incremental improvements in perceived performance. Not this one. Replacing my DAC’s stock power cord with the Wireworld Electra 7 was transformative to the point of mind-blowing. Right out of the box.

The Listening Environment:

http://jimtranr.com/Bedroom_audio_system.jpg

While the bedroom system here is technically “secondary” (and requires me to flop on the bed as my listening chair), it's gotten the lion’s share of playing time lately, owing to the presence of a flat screen in the main system’s living space and my spouse’s consuming interest in such compelling spellbinders as “The Property Brothers”, QVC’s at-all-hours culinary hardware offerings, and the cloying “Bachelor” and “Bachelorette” soap operas play-acting at “reality”.

Given its frequency of use, and despite its limitations due to unavoidable furniture placement and foot-traffic patterns that preclude optimum speaker positioning (as evidenced in the diagram), I decided to see if I could bump the system’s perceptible performance up a notch by substituting a Wireworld Electra 7 for the stock power cord feeding AC to my Uptone Audio ReGen’d TEAC UD-501 DAC.

My sole program source is a laptop-connected external USB drive that stores CD rips and high-resolution (24/88 through DSD128 and DXD) downloads. My primary listening fare consists of classical, jazz, and film scores, with occasional toe-dips into vocal standards, Broadway musicals, opera, and choral music. The system itself is detailed in my signature block below.

The Audition (with a Contextual Detour):

I began my audition of the Electra 7 right out of the box Ivan sent via UPS—in other words, with no burn-in and no settling time. For the first selection I picked a DSD128 reissue of one of RCA Living Stereo’s true sonic gems, Morton Gould’s reading of his own ballet score, “Fall River Legend”. I loaded the score into JRiver, clicked the play icon, and plopped down on the bed.

It took maybe 10 seconds into the first track to realize just how far down I’d lowballed my expectations with “up a notch”. What I heard was not the proverbial lifting of a veil typical of most upgrades I’ve installed, but rather a wholesale blowing down of the bedroom’s front wall.

Hyperbole? Well, let’s take a second to explore what we mean by “soundstage”. It’s typically expressed by its boundaries, specifically how far they extend laterally and fore-and-aft. If we make a system change that expands those boundaries…whoopee. If greater image focus and specificity accompany that expansion to the point of appearing holographic, so much the better. And if we detect better frequency extension and a more detailed presentation in the bargain, we’ve really hit the jackpot. Well, perhaps. Then again, maybe it’s just a “close” that doesn’t quite approximate horseshoes or hand grenades.

If you’ve ever peered into a loaded ViewMaster, you’ve been rewarded with a three-dimensional image that’s sharply defined throughout. Or if you’ve ever put on the special glasses required to watch a 3-D movie and gotten your eye poked with a written-into-the-script arrow or a spear, you’ve experienced a semblance of tactile reality. In both instances, the images are holographic. But do you feel the space within them, that sensation of palpable “air” that actually puts you in the picture?

With the Electra 7 in place, the most immediately noticeable effect with “Fall River Legend” was the massive infusion of human-breathable air into the performing space (Manhattan Center), which not only expanded the soundstage boundaries but gave the whole presentation you-are-there life. Gould’s orchestra became a reach-in-and-touch-someone three-dimensional entity to the farthest reaches of the now-expanded stage. With that, its output became tonally richer and far more nuanced than I’d ever heard in this system. Brass evinced “body” expressed in capital-S sonority; strings, resinous bite and liquidity; winds—well, I’ve never heard a reproduced bassoon so “gutsy”; percussion, tight, to-the-nines decay-resonant, and shirt-flapping impactful. No subtlety, no “incremental” here. This was out-and-out transformative.

But was it a one-off?

To test that, I next put on a different composition conductor, ensemble, recording venue, label, and recording team—Aaron Copland’s “Danzon Cubano performed by Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic in Philharmonic (later Avery Fisher) Hall on Sony (originally Columbia), SBM’d 16/44. It was easy to detect the change in venue, but the end result was the same in terms of soundstage expansion, image sharpness, instrumental body, tonal definition, transient quickness, and, above all, that same sense of almost-touchable air filling the performing space.

That close-to-you-are-there phenomenon repeated itself with opera (Alexander Borodin’s “Prince Igor”, Sony, 16/44, with much improved layering of the male and female vocal choirs in the “Polovtsian Dance with Choir”), Broadway (Leonard Bernstein’s final iteration of “Candide”, DG, 16/44, ditto on the layering) and filmscores (Robert Farnon’s “Captain Horatio Hornblower”, Reference Recordings, 16/44; Jerome Moross’ “The Jayhawkers”, Milan, 16/44; and Richard Rodgers’ “Victory at Sea”, RCA, 16/44).

For solo vocal in a more intimate studio recording venue, I put on Jane Monheit’s “There’s a Small Hotel” from her “Home” album (16/44). There was no artificial space enhancement here, but Monheit’s image was sharper and her tonal inflections better defined to the point where she could have been in the room (and I’d have been in a lot of trouble—I live in a shared space, remember).

How about a soloist singing to an audience in a larger venue? For that I selected Sarah Vaughan’s outing with Michael Tilson Thomas and the Los Angeles Philharmonic in “Gershwin Live”, recorded live in the Chandler Pavilion (CBS, 16/44). Sarah’s subtle vocal nuances (not least in the lowest registers) were far more clearly in evidence and she was more differentiated from the now-better-delineated orchestra behind her than I’d heard pre-Electra 7.

My Take:

Feeding the TEAC DAC with the Electra 7 is easily the most significant upgrade to the bedroom system since I converted what are supposed to be sleeping quarters into a mini-Stonehenge of four-foot tall GIK megaliths. That round of room treatment transformed the problematic room into a considerably more listenable space. The Electra 7 has gone beyond that, transforming the listening experience itself to the point where quality-engineered recordings all but put this listener in the performers’ laps. Too bad my Sonographe amp is captive-corded, or I’d slap an Electra 7 on it in a heartbeat.

Yamaki 11-12-2017 05:29 PM

Thanks for the review and your observations!

I've experienced much of the same changes in my system when upgrading the OEM power cords to WW products.

apogee 11-14-2017 08:45 PM

Wait till you move to silver electra and then platinum electra
apogee

Formerly YB-2 11-15-2017 10:14 AM

Have always found the first place to put a new power cable/IC is in digital gear. Whatever power 'grunge' it cleans up is most apparent in the digital domain as opposed to analog. The Silver 7 is a great cable to show this.

For The Love of Music 11-15-2017 10:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jimtranr (Post 879255)
Bottom Line for those averse to TMI (this is a looooong essay):



The vast majority of upgrades I’ve installed in my audio systems over the years have effected incremental improvements in perceived performance. Not this one. Replacing my DAC’s stock power cord with the Wireworld Electra 7 was transformative to the point of mind-blowing. Right out of the box.



The Listening Environment:



http://jimtranr.com/Bedroom_audio_system.jpg



While the bedroom system here is technically “secondary” (and requires me to flop on the bed as my listening chair), it's gotten the lion’s share of playing time lately, owing to the presence of a flat screen in the main system’s living space and my spouse’s consuming interest in such compelling spellbinders as “The Property Brothers”, QVC’s at-all-hours culinary hardware offerings, and the cloying “Bachelor” and “Bachelorette” soap operas play-acting at “reality”.



Given its frequency of use, and despite its limitations due to unavoidable furniture placement and foot-traffic patterns that preclude optimum speaker positioning (as evidenced in the diagram), I decided to see if I could bump the system’s perceptible performance up a notch by substituting a Wireworld Electra 7 for the stock power cord feeding AC to my Uptone Audio ReGen’d TEAC UD-501 DAC.



My sole program source is a laptop-connected external USB drive that stores CD rips and high-resolution (24/88 through DSD128 and DXD) downloads. My primary listening fare consists of classical, jazz, and film scores, with occasional toe-dips into vocal standards, Broadway musicals, opera, and choral music. The system itself is detailed in my signature block below.



The Audition (with a Contextual Detour):



I began my audition of the Electra 7 right out of the box Ivan sent via UPS—in other words, with no burn-in and no settling time. For the first selection I picked a DSD128 reissue of one of RCA Living Stereo’s true sonic gems, Morton Gould’s reading of his own ballet score, “Fall River Legend”. I loaded the score into JRiver, clicked the play icon, and plopped down on the bed.



It took maybe 10 seconds into the first track to realize just how far down I’d lowballed my expectations with “up a notch”. What I heard was not the proverbial lifting of a veil typical of most upgrades I’ve installed, but rather a wholesale blowing down of the bedroom’s front wall.



Hyperbole? Well, let’s take a second to explore what we mean by “soundstage”. It’s typically expressed by its boundaries, specifically how far they extend laterally and fore-and-aft. If we make a system change that expands those boundaries…whoopee. If greater image focus and specificity accompany that expansion to the point of appearing holographic, so much the better. And if we detect better frequency extension and a more detailed presentation in the bargain, we’ve really hit the jackpot. Well, perhaps. Then again, maybe it’s just a “close” that doesn’t quite approximate horseshoes or hand grenades.



If you’ve ever peered into a loaded ViewMaster, you’ve been rewarded with a three-dimensional image that’s sharply defined throughout. Or if you’ve ever put on the special glasses required to watch a 3-D movie and gotten your eye poked with a written-into-the-script arrow or a spear, you’ve experienced a semblance of tactile reality. In both instances, the images are holographic. But do you feel the space within them, that sensation of palpable “air” that actually puts you in the picture?



With the Electra 7 in place, the most immediately noticeable effect with “Fall River Legend” was the massive infusion of human-breathable air into the performing space (Manhattan Center), which not only expanded the soundstage boundaries but gave the whole presentation you-are-there life. Gould’s orchestra became a reach-in-and-touch-someone three-dimensional entity to the farthest reaches of the now-expanded stage. With that, its output became tonally richer and far more nuanced than I’d ever heard in this system. Brass evinced “body” expressed in capital-S sonority; strings, resinous bite and liquidity; winds—well, I’ve never heard a reproduced bassoon so “gutsy”; percussion, tight, to-the-nines decay-resonant, and shirt-flapping impactful. No subtlety, no “incremental” here. This was out-and-out transformative.



But was it a one-off?



To test that, I next put on a different composition conductor, ensemble, recording venue, label, and recording team—Aaron Copland’s “Danzon Cubano performed by Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic in Philharmonic (later Avery Fisher) Hall on Sony (originally Columbia), SBM’d 16/44. It was easy to detect the change in venue, but the end result was the same in terms of soundstage expansion, image sharpness, instrumental body, tonal definition, transient quickness, and, above all, that same sense of almost-touchable air filling the performing space.



That close-to-your-are-there phenomenon repeated itself with opera (Alexander Borodin’s “Prince Igor”, Sony, 16/44, with much improved layering of the male and female vocal choirs in the “Polovtsian Dance with Choir”), Broadway (Leonard Bernstein’s final iteration of “Candide”, DG, 16/44, ditto on the layering) and filmscores (Robert Farnon’s “Captain Horatio Hornblower”, Reference Recordings, 16/44; Jerome Moross’ “The Jayhawkers”, Milan, 16/44; and Richard Rodgers’ “Victory at Sea”, RCA, 16/44).



For solo vocal in a more intimate studio recording venue, I put on Jane Monheit’s “There’s a Small Hotel” from her “Home” album (16/44). There was no artificial space enhancement here, but Monheit’s image was sharper and her tonal inflections better defined to the point where she could have been in the room (and I’d have been in a lot of trouble—I live in a shared space, remember).



How about a soloist singing to an audience in a larger venue? For that I selected Sarah Vaughan’s outing with Michael Tilson Thomas and the Los Angeles Philharmonic in “Gershwin Live”, recorded live in the Chandler Pavilion (CBS, 16/44). Sarah’s subtle vocal nuances (not least in the lowest registers) were far more clearly in evidence and she was more differentiated from the now-better-delineated orchestra behind her than I’d heard pre-Electra 7.



My Take:



Feeding the TEAC DAC with the Electra 7 is easily the most significant upgrade to the bedroom system since I converted what are supposed to be sleeping quarters into a mini-Stonehenge of four-foot tall GIK megaliths. That round of room treatment transformed the problematic room into a considerably more listenable space. The Electra 7 has gone beyond that, transforming the listening experience itself to the point where quality-engineered recordings all but put this listener in the performers’ laps. Too bad my Sonographe amp is captive-corded, or I’d slap an Electra 7 on it in a heartbeat.



Power, power, power...does amazing things channeled properly, happy to read the excitement!

jimtranr 11-27-2017 05:02 PM

What I should have mentioned in the original post--the Electra 7 is outfitted with the upgraded plug and IEC C13 female connector.

I like the bedroom-system Electra 7-to-UD-501 combination so well that I've just ordered another Electra 7 with upgraded connectors to feed the UD-501 in the main system.

Happiness is.

jameslrock 11-27-2017 05:36 PM

I recall a few years ago when I added Silver Electra 7 power cords that it also changed my 2 channel system. Seemed as though the voice of the female singer focused and raised up about two feet in the room to where she could be standing. That is what started me in replacing all my cables in the room to WW. Good read.

jimtranr 11-27-2017 10:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jameslrock (Post 882479)
I recall a few years ago when I added Silver Electra 7 power cords that it also changed my 2 channel system. Seemed as though the voice of the female singer focused and raised up about two feet in the room to where she could be standing.

Glad you mentioned vertical imaging. I should have indicated it in my initial post, as I noticed the same thing with the Monheit and Vaughn vocals. Surprised me.

Karl Maga 11-28-2017 07:29 PM

An enjoyable and insightful post Jim. I’ve been waiting to decide precisely where the equipment will reside in my new room before ordering power cords, but plan to do what you are doing. Thank you for sharing your timely impressions.

W9TR 11-28-2017 08:03 PM

Thanks Jim - great post. The proof really is in the hearing!

jimtranr 12-06-2017 08:10 PM

Another Electra 7...same application in a different system
 
In a sense, my home-office system is the neglected audio stepchild of the family. That’s not the fault of the eBay-acquired Sonographe electronics or the dealer’s closing-up-shop demo Paradigm mini-speakers--overachievers in all cases, certainly at the prices I paid for them. The problem is the space they’re crammed into—a 12’x10’ room stuffed with a computer station, printer table, a single bed, a number of bookcases, and protruding closet, whose location and layout render anything approaching a reasonable listening venue a forget-about-it pipe dream. Listening is extreme nearfield, and “extreme” puts it mildly—when at the computer, I’m parked about a foot in front of the speaker plane, while the center-to-center distance between the left and right speakers is about five feet.

The system’s sole program source is, like the bedroom system’s, an external hard drive feeding a Windows 10 desktop computer running JRiver Music Center software. Music files consist of CD rips and hi-rez downloads ranging from 24/88 to double-DSD and DXD. This work station is where I download and rip all of them before I shoot them across the home network to the main and bedroom systems. Because of that, the office system is, despite its severe environmental limitations, the place where I initially listen and evaluate all rips and downloads to determine whether they “cut it” for further use.

Up until a couple of weeks ago, the system’s sound “engine” was the factory-installed sound card in the HP desktop. That restricted hi-rez playback to a maximum of 24/192, forcing me to configure JRiver to downconvert higher-resolution PCM and all DSD files for listening in the office system—not ideal for initial-evaluation listening. Off I went to eBay again and scooped up a comfortably-priced mint-condition TEAC UD-501 DAC (just like the ones in the main and bedroom systems). It came with a stock AC power cord.

Based on my happiness-is experience with an upgraded-connector Wireworld Electra 7 PC in the bedroom system (and it’s just gotten better with more burn-in), I thought “why not?” and ordered another one from he-who-treats-us-AA’ers-so-well. As much as anything else, I was curious about whether, given the sardine-can listening environment, the Electra 7 would make an appreciable difference in what I’m hearing from the office system. If it didn’t, I’d move the new Electra to an identical role in the much more acoustically hospitable main system.

The Electra arrived today, and I have just about two hours of playing time on it as I write this. So it’s not burned in, and I don’t know if it’s “settled” yet. But none of that matters. The Electra stays feeding AC to the home-office UD-501.

Even in this cramped listening space, the Electra 7’s superiority over a stock cord is as noticeably pronounced as it was in the bedroom system—in focus, bottom-end heft, dynamics, top-end liquidity, and tonal/timbral rightness…and in whatever program material I throw at it (not least “The Masque” from Lenny Bernstein’s recording of his “Age of Anxiety”). The Electra doesn’t repeal the laws of room acoustics—certainly not at one foot in front of the speaker plane--but even so, the discernibly blacker background teases out more spatial detail and instrumental and vocal layering.

That settles it. Starting today, I’m saving up for one more Electra with the upgraded connectors…for the main system’s DAC. I'll be in touch, Ivan.


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