Constantine Soo contemplates the
Furutech factor via the company's new
Audio Reference III interconnects
&
Speaker Reference III cables

May, 2006
   
                 
                 
                 
   
Furutech Co., LTD.
2-8-7 Higashi-Gotanda, Shinagawa-ku
Tokyo 141-0022
Japan
Tel. +81-3-5449-7701
Fax. +81-3-5449-0670
http://www.furutech.com/newindex.asp
   
                 
                 
                 
  THE FURUKAWA BACKGROUND

The high-end audio industry of the 80s saw the ascent of high-performance cable manufacturers that
advocate the application of Oxygen Free High Conductivity (OFHC) copper, as a means to pushing the
performance envelope of an audio system.

Rather than the 100% removal of the oxygen content in the conductor as indicated by its name, the OFHC
actually involved a more condensed packing of copper crystals in a meter of cable, so that a signal now
only has to cross the spaces between 400 grains of linear crystal, contrasting the 1500 pieces in non-
OFHC copper.  This specimen was soon succeeded by the Linear-Crystal OFC (LC-OFC), a longer grain
of copper crystals that numbered 15 grains in a meter.

Then, in 1986, a professor Ohno of Chiba Institute of Technology in Japan pioneered a continuous casting
process that yielded one single grain of copper crystal to the length of 1,125 meter at a diameter of 0.1
mm.  This process had come to be referenced to as the Ohno Continuous Casting process (OCC).  The
professor then entrusted his method to Furukawa Electric, a major power transmission and
telecommunications conglomerate that identified distortion and noise as the most detrimental elements
inflicting every audio system, while the high-end audio industry was still in its infancy in cable technologies.

Furukawa Electric refined the OCC product with its own process that pushed the content purity of the OCC
to greater than 99.9997%, and patented the end product internationally as the Purity Copper OCC, or
PCOCC®, and the “Pure Transmission” maxim was coined since 1987 to this day to signify both the
company’s expertise as well as the ongoing efforts of its employees.  

The first three Furukawa Electric products to feature the PCOCC in that year were the
FD-1005 Hi-Fi
Audio Cord
(37 strands/0.16mm), the FV-1005 Hi-Fi Video Cord (7 strands/0.4mm), and the FD-2010S
Super PCOCC
(2 x 37 strands/0.16mm).  These initial Furukawa™ products already utilized two layers of
polyethylene of differing densities as the first step in wrapping, which are in turn wrapped in a 95%-
coverage, braided layer of PCOCC consisted of 24 groups of 7 strands of the 0.12mm-thick copper, and
then wrapped under a soft PVC outer layer.  At that time, this cable already employed 24-karat gold-plated
center pin made of PCOCC, plus niceties such as non-magnetic aluminum shell and the crimping
technique.  In addition to offering its own PCOCC products, the company subsequently marketed its
PCOCC cables as OEM products to various clienteles all over the world.




FURUTECH

In 1988, a group of individuals formed Furutech, a non-affiliated private enterprise, and approached the
electric giant and became the worldwide distributor of the Furukawa PCOCC cables.  In the years before
2000, Furutech has begun researching into developing its own refinement technology diligently, with the
goal of advancing the performance properties of the PCOCC technology.  Thus, when Furukawa Electric
discontinued sales of its own PCOCC cables eventually in 2000, Furutech showed its confidence in the
PCOCC technology by introducing their own “Two-Stage α (Alpha) Cryogenic and Demagnetizing
Process” and applied it to the Furukawa™ Single Crystal Copper.

According to Furutech, the new cable, named α (Alpha)-OCC, “made for even quieter backgrounds and a
more refined sound while tightening up low frequency extension and control, a problem with original
PCOCC.”  

The first stage in the “Alpha Process” improves electrical conductivity for power and signal transfer, by
utilizing super-refrigerants, or liquid N2, to achieve temperatures between -196 to -250C in the
manufacturing process to induce deep, conditioning cryogenic freezing of all metal parts.  This process
relieves internal stress of the molecules by changing their molecular structure and then re-binding them in
higher density to achieve higher stability.  

The second stage further enhances conductivity of the same parts by engaging Sekiguchi Machine Sales
Co., Ltd’s patented Ring Demagnetization treatment, in exposing the same parts to controlled magnetic
attenuation for total elimination of magnetization.  Furutech told Dagogo that, “All metallic parts used in
Furutech products go through the Alpha Process treatment to keep all connectors, conductors, and metal
parts in a perfect stress-free, stable and highly conductive state.”

Furthermore, Furutech’s present products have progressed to the point where even their most affordable
products are given the same manufacturing precision and special plating techniques as received by the
top products, such as a total application of non-magnetic, hyper-pure materials.    

Hence, the “Alpha Process”-treated conductors are named α Conductor categorically, and the new
Furutech’s cables are of the following materials: α-OCC, αμ-Conductor (silver), and αμ-OFC (silver-plated
copper).  

The rest of the Furutech product comprises the following:

  • 2 20-ampere AC Power Distributors
  • 8 15-ampere AC Power Distributors
  • complete line of cablings in the “High End Performance Reference Series Cables”, including power
    cord, speaker cable, RCA and XLR interconnects and digital cables
  • complete line of μ-Conductor “High Performance Evolution Series Cables”
  • i-Link digital cable, HDMI digital cable and DVI adapter
  • an assortment of “Silver Series Video Cables”
  • 15 interconnect and speaker cable types in reels
  • 5 “High End Performance 20A Connectors”
  • 4 “High Performance Power Cables”
  • 16 power connectors/sockets/outlets
  • 19 power/IEC connectors, 11 RCA and XLR connectors of various performance levels
  • RD-2 Disc and Cable Demagnetizer
  • RWL-1 Tuning Panel
  • NANO Liquid Contact Enhancer
  • PC-2 Disc Pure Cleaner
  • and a lot more.




THE AUDIO REFERENCE III, XLR-$1,120 1.2mx2, RCA-$990 1.2mx2
 
                 
                 
 
         
                 
  The first subject of this review is the Furutech Audio Reference III interconnect.  Two pairs of the cable in
both RCA and XLR terminations were on hand for comparison.  Each of the 1.2 meter cable is an
embodiment of 3 primary technologies, namely α-OCC, αμ-Conductor and the GC-303.  The construction
of the cable is the most complex and elaborate I’ve seen.
 
                 
   
   
                 
  First, two twisted cores of 30 strands of 0.18mm of α-OCC, each wrapping around a 1.14mm silver αμ-
Conductor, provide signal circulation, which are insulated by a 30% air-foamed High Density Polyethylene
(HDPE).  The cores are twisted together with cotton yarn, and are wrapped in a 5.8mm thick non-woven
fabric, then initially shielded at an 80% density in a primary layer of 0.12mm braided αμ-Conductor and a
dual-PVC outer sheath, and sealed once more in a stranded braid made of fiberglass and copper.  The
construct is finally concealed in a high-durability Nylon yarn braid jacket.
 
                 
                 
 
The RCA version features Furutech’s own FP-106R, a Rhodium-plated
non-magnetic connector.  Unlike conventional RCA plugs, the FP-
106R is constructed of a brass  locking collet with Teflon insulation,
then adorned with Furutech’s high-pin-ratio αμ-Phosphor Bronze
Filament center pin.  Upon close inspection, this beautiful object
presents itself as a work of art.  The balanced XLR version, coined FP-
601MR and FP-602FR, on the other hand, utilizes brass body and
PVDF Teflon insulation, with an αμ-Beryllium Copper and αμ-Phosphor
Bronze conductors.  These connectors are also Rhodium-plated.  For
readers of more exotic tastes, 24k gold-plated FP-601MG and FP-
602FG are also available.

And there’s more.
 
                 
                 
  All of Furutech’s cables from the “High End Performance Reference Series” are fitted into a GC-303
module.  This module contains a material that Furutech developed specifically for electromagnetic
interference absorption.  On the cable products, it is housed in a module permanently installed on the outer
shell of a cable, in the AC Power Distributor product line, the GC-303 material is bonded to the interior
bottom-plate of the chassis.  

Furutech even provided a full technical read-out of the Audio Reference III’s electrical properties:
 
                 
   
   
                 
  The α-OCC-plated siver Furutech RCA represents perhaps one of the most triumphant implementation of
the two metals in a single product, and its abilities in tonal differentiation were quite incomprehensible for
around a meager grand.

For while it was not at the same level of performance as the vastly more expensive Audio Note, its
 
  dynamic and texturing dispositions were of such refinement that it conveyed the glory
of the $15.5k Harmonix Reimyo CAT-777’s delicate tonality and flamboyant
dynamics, as well as a spacious top-end and superb soundstaging from the $2,500
Superphon Revelation III.  The Audio Note Sogon LX, on the other hand, exacerbated
the budget Superphon’s solid-state persona.
 
                 
                 
  The Furutech was the only cable that I have encountered with enough competencies to do justice to the
Harmonix Reimyo to such extent, at the same time not manifesting the level of super-consciousness that
would undermine the virtues of the tube champion’s budget solid-state counterpart.
 
                 
                 
  Likewise, connecting the $9k Linn Klimax Chakra 500 Twin solid-state amplifier to
the Harmonix Reimyo via the RCA also revealed the $1k Furutech’s superb value, in
its unrelenting ability to convey the tonality of the tube preamplifier upstream that
would oftentimes be awash along most other similarly priced cabling.  This system
context represented the only instance in which a sub-$5,000 cable was able to
sustain the intricate sound of the Harmonix Reimyo to my satisfaction.

The XLR version was also the only sub-$5,000 cable I’ve used that was instrumental
enough in soliciting the fullest tonalities from the Wadia 270se-driven 27ix v3.0
 
  Decoding Computer.  Providing a balanced configuration between the Wadia and the Linn Klimax Chakra
500 Twin in driving GamuT’s $12k, 89dB/4Ω L5 loudspeaker, the Furutech liberated considerable more
potent dynamic contrasts from its RCA version, due possibly to a lowered noise floor.
 
                 
                 
 
The Furutech Audio Reference III XLR was also of such rarity in its
balanced suite of virtues that even with budget components, like the
$2,490 Krell KAV-400xi integrated amplifier, it never presented a dull
sonic adventure, in addition to conveying the budget Krell’s dynamic
and output potency. While cables of higher caliber only served to
scrutinize the Krell, the Furutech induced a sonic wall of coherency and
power.  For this factor, I recommend the Furutech as the first choice to
readers looking for best values.
 
                 
                 
     
     
                 
                 
                 
                 
      DAGOGO© 2006