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... Siegfried Linkwitz claims all modern amps with distortion below 0.1% sound about the same, all other things being equal.Blind listening tests have tended to confirm it.Note the caveats - 'all other things being equal' and 'tended'. I know from experience with my LS 88's and other speakers low distortion amplifiers sometimes sound the same - but not always. Some of the time it is corrected by ensuring they are spl matched (what some dealers will do to sell product is sickening really) but again not always.ThanksBill
After dinner and a bottle of red, I'm afraid I have to give vent to my disagreement with many of the things you've said in your post ... and you've covered a lot! It's a long post!
Firstly, "Siegfried Linkwitz claims all modern amps with distortion below 0.1% sound about the same, all other things being equal." Well he might ... however, is what he says bedrock truth?
Rod Elliott (another guru whose elctronic designs I applaud) says that there is no difference in cables! But plenty of others say there is! And there was a notorious hi-fi-mag reviewer who claimed the same thing (he only seemed to measure amps, he didn't sit doen and LISTEN to them!
All I know is, when I took my old Naim 250 over to Hugh's place about 3 years ago and compared it to an AKSA 55 (NOT, notice, an AKSA 55N+!) the AKSA blew it away! So I immediately ordered 3 AKSAs and, when I'd built them, sold my Naim gear.
This was not a "blind" test but the difference was so apparent, it didn't need to be.
I think there is a problem with "blind" audio tests which might - I repeat MIGHT - not occur with blind wine tests in that what is immediately favourable towards one of the contestants might not deliver the same result over an extended period of time? But also with wine ... haven't you been to a winery and said "wow, that's great", bought a dozen and then regretted it as you've opened the bottles at home over successive weeks?
And I would be very suspicious of any pussy footing around and fancy excuses for not doing it.
I can see benefits with blind tests for reviewing purposes for commercial reasons but they don't make a lot of sense to me for the DIY builder.... it either sounds great or like crap. I am naturally curious and like to have an explanation for any changes in sound, but I don't dwell on it and appreciate it for what it is, better sound.
Though mebbe this is really what a "double-blind test" is about!!??
Double blind is when neither the tester nor the testee knows what each item being tested is.
Oh, and I don't agree with Siegfried that all amps sound the same. This is just not true, and I'm actually surprised he said it.
... "Much has been written about the sound of amplifiers in the Hi-Fi Press. Amplifiers can sound different due to non-linear distortion which generates new spectral components. The typical total harmonic distortion specification is merely a guide post and not a complete measure of amplifier distortion. THD should be below 0.1%, as a starting point, for amplifiers not to sound different from each other. More important is the distortion at low output power levels, below 2 W, where an amplifier spends most of its time during music reproduction, unless it is for Hard Rock. The crossover distortion of Class A/B amplifiers is impulsive in nature. It is very broadband and easily overlooked in the noise floor of the amplifier output spectrum. It registers low in a THD measurement, but the spectral components add in the time domain. They are responsible for much of the "solid-state sound". Class A amplifiers do not suffer from this inherent problem, but a well designed Class A/B can match their performance in practice. Amplifiers can also sound different when their relatively high output impedance, or low damping factor, interacts with the combined loudspeaker and speaker cable load impedance to cause a frequency dependent drive signal at the speaker terminals." ...
As you are quoting the words of Siegfried Linkwitz as "Gospel"
Firstly, he says: "THD should be below 0.1%, as a starting point, for amplifiers not to sound different from each other. This says to me that unless THD is less than 0.1%, amplifiers will sound different - absolutely fair enough! However, to me, he is NOT saying that if THD is much lower than 0.1%, all amps will sound the same.
Secondly, he says at the end of your quote: "Amplifiers can also sound different when their relatively high output impedance, or low damping factor ... etc..IE. he is quite clearly saying, here is an artefact of a particular design of an amplifier which will cause it to sound different to another amplifier ... even though they may both have 0.001% THD at 2 watts! I believe you are therefore entirely mistaken in your belief that SL said "all amps with THD of less than 0.1% will sound the same".
Furthermore, SL makes absolutely NO mention of clipping ... whereas I believe clipping makes it possible for two identical amps which are identical in every respect (and measurement) xept that one is a 50w (into 8 ohms) amp and the other is a 200w, to sound different - even when they are not being driven hard. From Pjay's experiment over on AA, even at a "2w average" sound level, the 50w amp will probably be driven into clipping for milliseconds, whereas the 200w will not. This will produce a sonic difference between them.
I'm also interested in your comment from your prior post; "The value of blind testing is in validating subjective impressions which can be fooled by many things. I would still use it even in DIY but that is just me because I am very aware of bias."I am also very aware of bias (and "cognitive dissonance", whereby the mod you've just spent time and money on MUST make it better! ) but how, exactly, are you going to use a blind test in a typical DIY situation where you are contemplating changing from a stock-supplied capacitor to a Black Gate?
Take speakers as an example because they are generally fairly easy to hear differences. In a blind test, speaker A may be the clear winner because it has a more detailed treble. That same speaker over time may sound fatuiging and downright annoying after listening to it for a couple of hours. A blind test scenario probably would not expose this issue.
You are spot on. When I design loudspeakers, rarely are the values I come up with during testing, the same as the final ones after I have lived with it for a while. You usually get excited with what you think is the best sound at testing, but clocking those listening hours tells you otherwise.
There's a lot of merit in what you are saying....
It's not viable with DIY loudspeakers to build 2 sets to do A-B or blind tests but I have tried doing tests in mono with each speaker having different components. I found it tended to confuse things (just me I suppose) and found it better to live with them for an extended period before doing any changes. My main speakers for example have been on going for 2 years and have had 5 major revisions, but the period between changes can be 6 months.
... I am generally unconcerned about claims made of speakers - they vary so much. Amplifiers IMHO posses more suptle differences so one should be careful to ensure bias is eliminated. ...