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nathanm - did you bother trying it? let me guess - you're one of those people that believe all transports are the same, and that "bits are bits" right?...anyway - perhaps you're right. perhaps it IS psychological - but it's easy to try it.
and don't bother making fun of people here. just enjoy.
...I'm not a newbie when it comes to common sense....I know where I'd place my bet.
For the betting people...I've tallied the responses so far. Out of 15 responses:3 can reproduce the result (YES)8 cannot (NO)4 are undecide (Carlman, JoshK, Malcom Fear, and randytsuch)
For those who do not hear the "difference" it has been traced to system setup (use of very fancy power cords) and overall system transparency. ...
Quote from: peakrchau /quote]...you wrote yesterday:For those who do not hear the "difference" it has been traced to system setup (use of very fancy power cords) and overall system transparency...Today you're saying that the people who don't hear it are the one's with "tabeltop" CD players. That seems like a bit of a contradiction. A bit of clarification:I re-read the http://db.audioasylum.com/cgi/m.pl?forum=hirez&n=92055">original post on AA regarding fancy cables. The contention is that some high end power cables introduce a colouration that complements the fault(s) of CD playback. With the "skip track access" method, the difference is "still" noticeable on these systems but the simpler cable construction gets you the more neutral result.I cannot afford to spend big $$$ on Shunyata power cords to confirm the above point but it is interesting that a lot of the reviewers at TAS and Stereophile are using these cables. This is not to say that power cords do not influence the reproduced sound, but yes the effect is more unambiguous on transparent systems where other faults are less likely to osbcure the subtle (for some) improvements. In the high end, these subtle improvements are why people pay big bucks for cables. Place you bets
/quote]...you wrote yesterday:For those who do not hear the "difference" it has been traced to system setup (use of very fancy power cords) and overall system transparency...Today you're saying that the people who don't hear it are the one's with "tabeltop" CD players. That seems like a bit of a contradiction.
D) My system is probably too cheap to resolve the difference. I thought I remember reading that the cost of the components in the chain need to exceed $5000 in order to hear this I'm about a grand short...
no offense, but I didn't read your other posts nathanm - usually try to avoid them actually
... the "digital dance" ...
Nathan, reading your last post here got me thinking very dangerous! It's a damn shame that someone hasn't come up with a web site similar to the Urban Legend one - http://www.urbanlegends.com/ulz/ - but for all of these audiophile ideas.
Wow, what a thread. I didn't hear a difference in my system................ I would have presumed that there is something wrong with my CD player and would be looking to repair or replace it. In other words, it doesn't sound enhanced ...If anyone really cares, they could absolutely convince me and others here of this transport phenomenon if they were to record the SPDIF output from the player to a computer under both conditions and then generate a graphical delta of the two output files. While you're at it, try it with a scratched-up disc and a pristine disk under both conditions - one might conclude whether it's the error correction system. I don't really expect anyone to do this, I'm just conjecturing, but I wonder what free software exists to do this test. You'd need an SPDIF input on your computer.