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They also come with a jumper strap and extra terminals for bi-wiring, and I hope you won't now argue that bi-wiring is worthwhile.
A CD player is not a turntable! There's no physical contact anywhere in the process and, more important, all CD players have a memory buffer from which the actual output stream flows. So if a CD player is jostled so badly that it mistracks, the music continues to play from the buffer until the transport can find its place again. This happens transparently in the background, and is exactly why CD players meant for joggers boast a large buffer. ..
We can measure every audio parameter to several orders of magnitude below what is audible. Ears (the brain, really) vary a lot over time and thus are unreliable. Gear is not unreliable unless it's defective.
A facinating,simplistic and circumscribed world view that is very comfortingbut is ultimately unrealistic. You are assuming that all variables that affect audio hardware performance and human perception of audio reproduction are already known and can be measured. You don't know what you do not know or what else might be discovered in the future. You have failed to allow for progress or change with a static world view. We appear to have unreconcilable philosophical differences on this subject.I ...
(Scotty wrote)> We can hear things occuring when we play recordings of music through stereo systems that we cannot yet measure < I disagree strongly with that. We can measure every audio parameter to several orders of magnitude below what is audible. Ears (the brain, really) vary a lot over time and thus are unreliable. Gear is not unreliable unless it's defective. ..
Hi Ethan,While I think measurments are fine, could you tell me what measures "soundstage and its width/depth"?While it is quite easy to measure "placement" of an image between the speakers, what "numbers" of what instrument would tell you if you will hear a flatter image, or a deeper image?I know you might mention phase relationships and such, but to my knowledge there really isn't any way to measure it, but you certainly can hear it...
John,> could you tell me what measures "soundstage and its width/depth"? <Yes, of course, extremely simple!Stereo imaging is a function of the volume and phase relationships between channels. Imaging is also affected by reflections, both embedded in the recording and in the room you're listening. These are easily measured assuming you have test signals as a source, as opposed to trying to determine the amount of echo and reverb in a recording after the fact. But there's no magic here, and ...
Scotty, A proper double blind test can prove this beyond ...