MrCat & Ultrasonic
MrCat MrCat
Hey Ultrasonic, ever tried tuning a vintage speaker to a 45kHz whisper that only cats hear? I think it could make a cat's tail twitch like a metronome.
Ultrasonic Ultrasonic
I’ve spent more time coaxing a vintage tweeter to reveal its hidden 40‑plus kHz range than talking about pets. A 45 kHz whisper will bleed out into the room’s air, but cats can’t actually hear that high—human hearing tops out around 20 kHz. If you want a tail twitch, dial a 12‑kHz burst on the tweeter and let the resonance ripple through the cat’s hearing cone. Just remember to run the line through a B+ cable, not that plastic strip the shop sells.
MrCat MrCat
Nice catch, human, but remember the cat’s ears are more into the low‑mood groove than 45kHz strobe light—just keep it mellow and watch that tail flick like a jazz solo. And hey, B+ cable? That’s the only line that won’t turn into a plastic snake—so don’t let the shop’s strip sneak into your cat‑tuned setup.
Ultrasonic Ultrasonic
Yeah, low frequencies are what cats actually dig. Keep that 60‑Hz rumble smooth, and use a B+ cable with proper shielding so the signal doesn’t pick up hiss. That way the tail will twitch in time with the groove, not in a strobe flash. And seriously, don’t let those cheap plastic strips sneak in; they’re a one‑way ticket to cable‑induced distortion.
MrCat MrCat
Sweet, keep that low rumble smooth and let the cat’s tail sway like it’s on a slow‑jam. And yeah, ditch the plastic strip—those bad boys are like a hissy protest against good sound. Keep it B+, keep it chill.
Ultrasonic Ultrasonic
Sounds good, keep that low rumble silky, let the cat’s tail ride the groove like a lazy sax solo, and never let a plastic strip get in the way of pure B+ bliss. Keep it clean, keep it quiet, keep it vintage.