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Well that shows how much technical know-how I have. I have read a lot of overview-type documents about the process and that's the impression I had. Sorry for the misinformation, it wasn't malicious.
When you get together with Clark, have him bring his burner and burn some of your CD's you know well.
At this rate, he's going to need a U-haul to bring stuff, and I'm going to have the most tweaked, adjusted, fine tuned system on the East coast. My reputation's going to be in ruins.
Quote from: miklorsmithWhen you get together with Clark, have him bring his burner and burn some of your CD's you know well.At this rate, he's going to need a U-haul to bring stuff, and I'm going to have the most tweaked, adjusted, fine tuned system on the East coast. My reputation's going to be in ruins.
Perhaps!However, I would advise (and have so advised for fifteen years) simply not to drop big bucks on any of them. My fine-tuning procedures produce results on a decent Sony, say, that easily equal the dcS and Wadia efforts.Moreover, were we never to admit how "broken" they all are, the truth of the matter would forever lie undiscovered.clark
The scary thing was the misinformation at the Genesis website you referred to. Here's a guy who claims to know how CDs work and is telling us what problems his approach fixes, and he's got a LOT of the particulars wrong. He's talkling about pit jitter. It doesn't exist. He's saying that he doesn't quite believe that the CD player clock is in sole control of the rate the bits are processed. Sheesh. And this guy used to be an IT professional of some kind? I believe you when you say you hear a difference. ...
miklorsmith,my understanding is that CDs are made with an injection molding, not stamping, process and that aluminum sheet stamping never comes into the picture, regardless of which of the three (in 1994) manufacturing methods are used. The aluminum or gold is vapor deposited after the pits are formed in the mold. Nevertheless, I would assume that deterioration of the mold is a factor.
How would you imagine diagonals to be interpreted by the CDP laser? Pit or land? Yes or no? One or Zero?
Quote from: miklorsmithHow would you imagine diagonals to be interpreted by the CDP laser? Pit or land? Yes or no? One or Zero?If a CDP can't tell if it's a pit or land (yes or no, etc) how will a CDRW system be able to read it accurately in order to write it correctly?-KJ
With EAC, it will re-read (repeatedly if necessary) it until it determines if it is a pit or not.Thanks Skrivis...you have given Mayo the opourtunity to say, "I heard a difference, but I don't beleive there was a difference because it wasn't under double Ray Charles conditions, with a control group, so it wasn't good methodology. Therefore, there might have been a difference and there might not have been. What I heard doesn't matter because it was a sighted test, and as everyone knows , sighted tests are invalid......"Clark, you are wasting your time....
When you said they're all broken, I thought you meant a basic design flaw. How would "fine-tuning" help that?
Clark, you are wasting your time....
Thanks Skrivis...you have given Mayo the opourtunity to say, "I heard a difference, but I don't beleive there was a difference because it wasn't under double Ray Charles conditions, with a control group, so it wasn't good methodology."Clark, you are wasting your time....
But I am now aware, as I had not been when I began here, that Scott is an apparently indefatiguable contrarian.
Plus I have learned that he connects his speakers with zip cord...
In other words, unlike too many reviewers, before I put my name to "X works", I'll be sure that it does, and I'll know why I think so and I'll be able to explain in small words why know I'm not deluding myself.