| River Cable FLEXYGY 6
Loudspeaker Cable and Starflex Subwoofer
Cable |
|
Rollin on the River |
|
Nelson Brill |
|
January 2004
|
Specifications:
FLEXYGY Loudspeaker Cable:

Flat Topology 6 x 16 AWG in parallel with hyper fine
stranded 4 Sigma laminar copper in cadmium-free
polymer jacket. Dressed in proprietary River Slinx
Gold FX, a unique mesh, threaded with gold. Terminated
with choice of bananas, spades or pins.
Price: 2 meter pair- $185; 3 meter pair- $215; 5 meter
pair-$270
Star Flex Subwoofer Cable:
18 AWG oxygen free copper with top line Canare
connectors and special
polyethylene dialectric for low capacitance and high
velocity factor. Dressed in River Slinx Gold FX mesh;
non-directional.
Price: one meter - $40.00; 2 meter: $50.00; 3 meter:
$60.00
Address:
River Cable Technologies
350 Power Avenue Hudson, NY. 12534
Telephone: 1-888-927-4837
Fax: 1-888-776-3713
Website: www.rivercable.com
“The
behavior of water is often used as an analogy for
electricity. Think of a stream flowing over various
streambeds and consider the effects the rocks and
pebbles and fallen branches and variations of the
streambed all have on the water’s flow. Similarly, the
music signal may meet with greater or lesser
resistance from the capacitors, resistors, and wire
that it must flow through.” Good Sound, by Laura
Dearborn, p. 105.
The River’s Source
One of the things that
absolutely warms the cockles of my audiophile heart is
finding a product that performs well above its price
point and brings to listeners a myriad of sonic
rewards and pleasures at a reasonable price. It is in
this vein that I take pleasure in introducing the
family of River Cables to readers of Stereo Times, as
a product, which to my ears personifies these
admirable goals.
The parent company of River Cable has been designing
and building cable systems for the television and
professional audio industry for over 25 years. Earlier
this year, River Cable was launched as a separate
business unit and began its operations on the shores
of the Hudson River. Katherine Hilliard, Director of
Marketing for River Cable talked about her company’s
admirable commitment to preserving the environment of
the Hudson River and its local Hudson Valley guild
shops, one of which provides the hand soldered cable
connectors and other parts for Rivercable products.
The outstanding build quality, attention to detail and
craftsmanship of the cables under review here, the
FLEXYGY 6 speaker cable and Star Flex subwoofer cable,
was readily apparent right out of their box, or should
I say, “birth.” Each cable comes with a unique
feature: its own birth certificate. This sealed
document (looking to my lawyer’s eye quite impressive)
is signed by a River Cable test engineer who certifies
that your baby has met all of four separate test
conditions for its release under River Cable’s
Lifetime Warranty Program. In lieu of a infant’s
footprint, this certificate provides a graph detailing
the results of a rigorous “Risetime-Overshoot Test,”
done on each individual cable. This test passes a 5
KHz square waveform from a direct coupled amp through
the cable attached to a 4 ohm precision load. This
test highlights any slight defect in the cable’s
construction or structure before it is packed and sent
on to its new owner.
In taking these new babies from their packaging, I was
immediately struck with
the beauty and simplicity of their design. After
experimenting with various cable designs and conductor
materials, River Cable engineers concluded that
construction geometry, (the size, shape and topology
of the wire used to fabricate speaker cable), was THE
controlling factor in attempting to minimize
inter-conductor capacitance and obtain as close to
zero resistance in a speaker cable. They found that
only a flat cable, where the proximity of individual
conductors can be minimized, offered the lowest
capacitance and least resistance in a cable design.
Hence the birth of FLEXYGY 6: a flexible cable of flat
topology with lots of ultra-fine, high purity copper
arranged in conductor groups. The Star Flex Subwoofer
cable is also composed of high density copper material
with a polyethylene dialectric for achieving low
capacitance and high velocity in a subwoofer cable. It
also contains a polyvinyl carbon inner shield to help
reduce amp noise. Both cables are safeguarded and
dressed in an elegant proprietary mesh, called
RiverSlinx Gold FX, a unique and beautiful protective
covering threaded with gold for added style. I found
both the FLEXYGY 6 and the Star Flex cable to be
elegant and extremely flexible to use, particularly in
my setups where the FLEXYGY cable had to sit flat
under heavy carpet and where both cables had to
connect to amps in very tight places in my racks. I
also particularly liked the easy to connect design of
the small spades and elegantly locking banana
connectors designed for these cables.
The River’s Sound
I began my listening
sessions with the FLEXYGY 6 in my small office space
setup, connecting a pair of highly resolving Talon
Khite monitors to the dynamic solid-state integrated
amp, the Portal Panache. Upon replacing my reference
Analysis Plus Oval 9 speaker cable with the FLEXYGY 6,
I was immediately struck with the litheness and
resolution of the midrange and how the treble was
defined with more energy and finesse, without any
unwanted harshness added to the mix. This was
particularly noteworthy in vocal music, where the
pitch and tone of the specific performer was captured
in all of its energy and color. For instance, one of
my favorite chanteuses, Patty Larkin, entered my
listening space singing just for me, with her unique
vocal range and colorful guitar rifts perfectly placed
in tone, space and pitch. On “Booth of Glass”
from her wonderful disc, Angel’s Running [Windam Hill
7290210318-2] the FLEXYGY 6 pushed the energy of
Larkin’s vocal delivery, (ranging from a whisper to a
gallop), to crystalline heights, even at low volume.
Another vocalist captured just right by the addition
of the FLEXYGY 6 was Ricky Lee Jones, from her
wonderful, eclectic recording Pop Pop [Geffen
GEFD-24426]. On “I Wouldn’t Grow Up”
(a personal anthem of mine), the FLEXYGY 6
allowed full delivery of Jones’ unique and delicate
vocal styling without compromise, even as she goes
from the lowest to highest vocal registers and offers
a breathy whistling of the chorus. Distinct male
voices also were well served by the addition of the
FLEXYGY 6. I love to use the recordings of Bill
Morrissey to see how a system handles his unique
baritone. Morrissey's “Songs Of Mississippi John
Hurt” [Philo 11671-1216-2] is a masterpiece of
blues band, jug band, old-timey classics. Through the
FLEXYGY 6, Morrissey’s voice was captured in perfect
pitch and tone and even background sounds like the
clock that ticks throughout “Hey, Honey, Right Away”
rewarded the avid listener. Similarly, Van “The Man”
Morrison, on “The Street Only Knew Your Name”
from The Philosopher’s Stone [Polydor P2-31789] was
delivered full tilt through the FLEXYGY 6, with no
distortion of his vocal styling and great separation
between Van and his backing band, portrayed accurately
with great power and finesse. Bass was also present in
spades through the FLEXYGY 6, kept in good clean
balance with the FLEXYGY’s treasure trove area: its
delivery of accurate and energized midrange and
treble.
The replacement of the Analysis Plus Oval Nine with
the FLEXYGY 6 in this small room system made for an
efficient comparison between these two similarly
priced speaker cables. I adore the Oval Nine, for its
robust and weighty presentation, especially with bass
heavy rock and blues material. However, I have to say
that in this small listening set-up, I preferred the
lithe and detail of the mids and highs that the
FLEXYGY rewarded. With small scale jazz and vocals,
the FLEXYGY was hands down my favorite, as the Oval
Nine seemed a bit slower and weighed down. Others may
hear this differently, but the FLEXYGY 6 was my choice
for this sweet second system in my office space.
I next moved the FLEXYGY 6 cable downstairs into my
reference listening system to test its meddle in a
much larger listening space with my floorstanding
speakers, the Talon Khorus, driven by a Class D
digital amp, the magnificent beast known as the
Spectron Musician II. I started my listening sessions
with large-scale orchestral works to see how the
FLEXYGY 6 handled focus and soundstaging of these
large works. First up was the wonderful recording of
Rachmaninoff's Symphonic Dances [Reference Recording
RR-96CD], a shimmering, complex piece of music
recorded in brilliant form. The Third Movement
presents a wealth of orchestral sound and color, with
xylophone, triangles, tambourine and chimes all thrown
in to the glorious, robust string sections. The
FLEXYGY 6 handled this section with finesse and grace,
although it was immediately apparent that with its
introduction into the audio chain, I had been ushered
graciously from my front section seat in the theatre
to a rear or balcony section. The bursting energy of
this piece which I was accustomed to hearing through
my reference Spectron Remote Sensing Digital Speaker
Cables was now slightly more relaxed and a new, more
removed, perspective on the soundstage was heard. It
was not that it was a negative change, simply a change
in musical perspective, one that another listener
might prefer. I hunger for the energy and sense of
being there, in front, with the players, but one might
prefer a more relaxed perspective, which is what the
FLEXYGY 6 provided. The same observation was made when
playing big band jazz. My current favorite arranger is
Bill Holman and his "A
View From The Side"
[JVC2050-2] is a recording that highlights this
brilliant arranger and the artistry of his bandmates
with brash and gusto. With the FLEXYGY 6 in place, the
difference in tone between a trumpet and a flugelhorn,
on the composition “The Peacocks” was clearly
portrayed, yet again from a slightly more recessed
listening position than I had heard with the Spectron
digital cables in place. This difference might be due
to a difference in solid state amplification verses
the Class D digital circuitry of the Spectron amp,
whose Remote Sensing Cables (costing a good bit more
than the FLEXYGY 6) complete the digital loop from amp
to speaker. I preferred the Spectron cables in this
large scale listening context, although another
listener might prefer the more relaxed perspective
offered by the FLEXYGY 6.
My last stop with the FLEXYGY 6 cables, combined with
the Star Flex sub cable, was in my home theatre system
to see how these reasonably priced cables might reward
the home theatre crowd. Well, I’m here to tell you
that I barely made it out of the Hobbit Shire to tell
you about the results. The same sweet and dynamic
midrange of the FLEXYGY 6 heard in my office system
literally hurled me into the center of the celebration
action in Chapter 4 of The Lord of the Rings, The
Fellowship of The Ring [New Line Home Entertainment
DVD 5413] with dancing and fireworks exploding
accurately all around my five Talon Khite monitor
speaker setup. Explosions of those fireworks, as well
as the falling walls in Middle Earth, were perfectly
rendered in space and time with bass impact from my
Talon Roc sub being the way I like it: definitive,
crisp and solid. The FLEXYGY’s way with mids and highs
created a realistic environment where dialog was
delivered in perfect pitch and tone, even over such
loud, dynamic effects as bursting fireworks. The Star
Flex sub cable clearly allowed the Roc to flow with
definitive power on the freewheeling chaos in Chapter
12 of Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines [Warner Home
Video DVD 85392772322], where California’s new
governor (a.k.a. Arnold Schwarzenegger) is propelled
through shattering glass, concrete blocks and upturned
fiery cars in his pursuit of the “Terminatrix” who’s
driving a huge construction vehicle. All bass effects
were delivered in powerful strokes, with appropriate
air and combustion. Listening to a smiling Jerry
Garcia’s “Touch of Grey,” from the View From The Vault
3 [Monterey Home Video DVD 12233479621] brought clear
delineation of Garcia’s sweet treble notes over Phil
Lesh’s solid bass foundation without a loss of focus,
which can be the case with this particular live
recording. Finally, for you audiophile birders out
there, (who always have your binoculars close to your
listening chair) you must check out Winged Migration
[Columbia Tristar DVD 43396002418] with its wonderful,
sinuous musical score and myriad of nature sounds. The
FLEXYGY 6 handled all of it seamlessly, from the
urgent calls of snow geese to the rumbling final
explosion of falling Arctic ice. The synergy of the
FLEXYGY 6 speaker cable with the Star Flex sub cable
made for a seamless, enveloping audio experience that
clearly improved the fun, accuracy and dynamics of my
home theatre system.
Take Me To The River
I
highly recommend the FLEXYGY 6 speaker cable and the
Star Flex sub cable as products that clearly surpass
and surprise well beyond their price point, and reward
the listener with a bountiful improvement in sound. If
you are looking for a reasonably priced speaker cable
which will give you everything your associated
equipment can offer, especially in the all important
midrange, you should audition these cables. With their
30-day home trial guarantee, you can just sit back and
“Watch The River Flow.”

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