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This reminds me of a wonderful song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I_e-RQZVwxg
Either ASR isn't taking the right measurements to indicate what's going on,
..or he's misinterpreting the measurements that he's taken.
Those are the only two possible conclusions, because many pairs of ears have heard a clear and enduring improvement in the sonic presentation.
Based on the positive reports posted in this thread earlier this year I purchased a 156 model. Then I posted that I thought it had a very positive effect on the sonics of my system. As time went on, however, I realized that it really wasn't making much if any difference in the sonics. I took it out of my system, didn't notice any change without it, and eventually sold it. Kishore may be on to something when he suggests there may be a placebo effect based on wishful thinking using this unit and most other power conditioners. I've had this happen before, actually, with other power conditioners and Lord knows, I've tried at least a dozen of them. Initial encouragement soon followed by disillusionment and that includes three different models over the years of the PS Audio regenerators plus another regenerator (two models) from Pure Power in Canada. Another thing. It's easy to misinterpret a "change" in sonics as "better" when it really isn't, and sometimes it takes a while to realize that.
I was really letdown and disappointed when it became apparent that the 156 really didn't help with the electricity problem that degrades the sonics of my system in the evening hours.
This is a common problem that doesn't have anything to do with the brand of power conditioner. If a PS Audio regenerator didn't resolve the issue, then the problem may be much larger than you can fix on your own.
Placebo effect similarly affecting dozens of listeners OR one guy not getting it right?I wonder which is more probable...
Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman is an excellent book for understanding how the brain has evolved and how easy it is to fool the brain, and for the brain to fool itself. Marketers know this stuff, but the general public doesn’t.When a manufacturer advertises that you’ll hear X and Y when you use their product, as soon as you read that, your brain is unconsciously “primed” to experience that result. It is near impossible to shake that priming, even if you consciously try to. End result - through no effort/fault of your own, you experience that result. There are many other biases at work and collectively, it’s damn hard to recognize them all and stay objective.I’d encourage all audiophiles to read this book - it just might change the way you view this hobby and how you’ve been interacting with it. It’s changed my perspective profoundly. This isn’t about tastes and preferences, it’s about understanding what others are intentionally doing to create a bias in you and influence purchase decisions.
It doesn't matter whether your brain is fooled -- especially in this hobby -- for many reasons --1. You're not going to know if your brain is fooled because you need your fooled brain to determine if your brain is fooled2. 99% of this hobby is all about fooling the brain into thinking you're listening to something that resembles real music and it doesn't -- not even close!3. it's foolish to spend the kind of money we do on gear and cables -- you gotta be damn near brain dead to do it 4. you also gotta be a bit crazy to participate in an online conversation with strangers about the sonic merits of power conditioners5. no one with half a brain would take any manufacturer's claims seriously; it's called marketing, not truthtelling, and marketing is 99% bullsh*t. 6. no one cares about expectation bias. If I expect to hear an improvement and I do, then no one can convince me otherwise. It's an experience, and whether it's real or imagined is irrelevant. 7. Each of us intentionally influences our purchase decisions every day. We often give ourselves ridiculous reasons for buying stuff we don't need. Does anyone really need a $2,500 power conditioner??? Nope, but we want one anyway....8. ...because all of us are in the business of buying a feeling -- the product and price doesn't matter so much.
So how exactly do you use this understanding to reduce the cost and complexity of your system?
You gotta fool your brain into accepting the idea that merely reading a book on biases allows one to reduce cost and increase the enjoyment of one's audio system. That's great, BTW, if you pulled that off. It's probably only temporary, though. The upgrade voice is louder than the whisper of the cheaper system.