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If you're willing to come to my place in CT with a power amp in hand to emulate, then we'll talk. Otherwise, what do you envision as happening with a circuit I'd build?
Who would try it and say if it sounds the same as your amp?
Agreed 100 percent. Again, my objection is when products are promoted fraudulently, where the very high prices are justified by nonsense and pseudo-science intended to trick the uneducated. So while I put everything Shunyata makes in that category, I don't do so for an $80,000 car.
I'm sure there are. In that case they're just overpriced but not incompetent too.
But it really isn't higher quality. Rather, it's the placebo effect at work. Or comb filtering. Nobody can hear the difference between 0.001 and 0.002 percent distortion. Or between a circuit that's down 0.1 dB at 20 KHz versus another down 0.2 dB there. So in this case even if "quality" can be shown to be higher, it's irrelevant.
Yes, I think so. I mean, what else do you think there is?!
Still not sure what you're getting at. I'm sure GM did more than "plunk down" some microphones. (Actually Geoff Emerick was the engineer.)
I recently saw a funny quote from Fletcher, one of the more colorful characters in the pro audio forums. Some newbie was asking about toob gear, and Fletcher pointed out that back in the 1960s engineers tried very hard to get away from a "tube" sound. The goal then (as now) was to capture a performance as clearly and cleanly as possible! Over the years since, old audio equipment and technology has become glamorized and even romanticized.
Since this thread is titled Design Award, and the design award was given to the CLC, I have a question for the "subjectivists" on this forum, and especially the ones participating in this thread.The general sujectivist belief set appears to be; If it sounds good to me I'll use it and the heck with anything else. Now if that is a generally correct assumption, where do you draw the line, if at all, between the CLC and any other passive or active component?
Nice answer, Dayglow.First, I don't think subjectivists can be lumped into one convenient group any more than, say, religious people. Some believe in cables, some don't. Some believe in The Mighty Power of Clocks, some don't. Others probably don't find amplifiers to vary much in sound and focus on speakers. And so on.The central element is whether you trust what you hear or not. If a clock makes the listening experience better, a pure subjectivist would weigh the improvement vs. cost and go from there. A doubting subjectivist might hide the clock and not tell their friends about it.
The central element is whether you trust what you hear or not. If a clock makes the listening experience better, a pure subjectivist would weigh the improvement vs. cost and go from there. A doubting subjectivist might hide the clock and not tell their friends about it.
If I interpret your post as anything goes if it makes the "listening experience better" is that a fair interpretation?
Who is going to determine if I'm successful or not, and how? A listening test? That's too prone to error.
Not if both have a flat enough response and all artifacts sufficiently below the signal level. In that case they will sound the same by definition.
That's where the comb filtering comes in.
This is one of those cases where "extraordinary claims demand extraordinary proof."
The notion that some mysterious and as yet unknown audio parameter than can be heard but not measured is surely an extraordinary claim!
Sure. And the onus is on them to prove their claim.
So now measurements are acceptable as proof?
Not really! If someone prefers the sound of an amplifier that has obvious distortion or some other such anomaly, I'd say that person needs better ear training.
www.ethanwiner.com/believe.html
Hmmm. So subjective preference has no place in your world? Ideally we should all be part of some single-minded Borg collective when it comes to preference? And those whose preferences may be different will be assimila... er, I mean "trained" to like it?