A great cable from MIT in the AVt series. Music Interface Technologies, or MIT, uses arrays of embedded passive electronics.
Bruce Brisson, founder of MIT, began designing cables in the 1970s and, after licensing several of his designs to Monster Cable, founded MIT in 1984. The low-pass filter network used in MIT cables was created in 1989. The goal of the cables was to "control the efficiency of the network across the entire audio range, allowing the entire musical signal to pass through the system with minimal distortion." Bruce certainly knows a thing or two about cable design, having worked with such well-known companies as Spectral, Jeff Roland, Wilson, and Marin Logan.
According to MIT, the AVT-3 has 8 patented articulation poles.
MIT's patented parallel multi-pole network technology - provides 8 articulation poles for improved performance!
Varilay(c) geometry - patented geometry for improved dynamic contrast.
P.E. insulation - reduces nonlinear dielectric distortion for excellent low-frequency detail and great sound.
2 Stars