Total Members Voted: 29
Should daj cease and desist placing subjective opinion polls in The Laband place future polls of this type in the Audio Central Forum? Occam,feel free to delete or move any polls you see fit to where ever they are most appropiate,it won't bother me at all.Scotty
........Occam must appreciate not having to think for himself with you around. ......
Quote from: daj on 5 Mar 2007, 10:25 pm........Occam must appreciate not having to think for himself with you around. ......No, that role is fufilled by SWMBO (She Who Must Be Obeyed), my wife, who has put up with me for 34 years.
Thanks Daygloworange.Now I know what it means but I still don't get it.Must be an inside joke between daj and daj.
. . . but I get a KICK out of me.
Quote from: daj on 6 Mar 2007, 01:39 am. . . but I get a KICK out of me. Obviously. daj,But I can't figure out why you are starting these polls (not why you're starting them in the Lab, but why you're posting them anywhere?
And what does O.M.G mean?daj followed up some of my speil with it then deleted it later.But I didn't get it.
Things have been a bit tense around here of late, tempers flair. Maybe daj if you were just a wee bit less verbose? Instead of throwing out topics right and left, take the time to read what has already been posted. There's enough to keep you busy and up-to-date for a good while! Yeah I know, we all want to be "noticed", to get into the fray, but it pays off in the long run to sit back and wait for the answers to come of their own accord. 'He who waits.." I think we've all had enough of personality clashes and blood boiling, fangs barred etc. aa
I think the Lab is the wrong forum for these polls, at least if I understand what the original intent of this forum was to be. I understood "The Lab" to be primarily for those doing DYI projects or for those interested in finding out something rather specific about audio electronics, speakers etc. It therefore seems to me that most of DAJ's polls would be better placed in "Audio Central". I also think the thread on modern recording technology, although fascinating, would be better placed in Audio Central, but that's just my two cents worth, and that's all the opinion is worth. I must admit to having some sympathy for DAJ's point of view however. I think the pendulum has swung a bit too far toward the subjectivist camp in audio and a swing back to a little more objectivity would be a good thing, both for the quality of the audio equipment available, and especially, for the prices of much of that equipment. As for the "Now playing" box, I'm sure someone has told you what that's about---it's about why we do this in the first place (I hope), the music we're listening to.Enjoy!
Quote from: Ethan Winer on 15 Feb 2007, 03:12 pmQuote from: mfsoa on 14 Feb 2007, 11:08 pmIF cable break in happens, what has been your experience as far as tonal shift?If cable break-in really happened, and the frequency response really did change over time, then that change could be easily measured and there'd be no more discussion about it.--EthanI believe we have a problem of 2 different perspectives, separated by a common language.I and many others often 'voice' their systems, not by any topological changes, but simply by substituting nominally equivalent components. I'll swap cables, opamps, capacitors, etc.... until the overally subjective perception is more to my liking. And I might well describe those changes as 'deeper bass', 'more extended highs', 'stronger midrange', etc.... and I'm well aware that upon measurement of frequency spectra, I'll find absolutely no difference between the original and my preferred configuration. The problem is that those changes are perceived as spectral changes, although to the extent to which I'm able to measure by accessable instrumentation, I can discern no changes whatsoever. But sadly, I am constrained by my perception to describe it as I hear it, while knowing that description is inaccurate, or at least does not correlate with expected measurements. [nor am I willing to engage in that conversation of 'well thats just a tweako bandaid', because when I substitute a specific $6 opamp for a $3 opamp, and my perception of the net result is what was subjectively unlistenable transformed to groovy and mo' betta, thats good enough...]Heck, I build power conditioners / noise filters for mains power. But seldom do people react with 'I hearing a lower noise floor', rather I typically hear that the bass is more extended and tighter, the treble more (or less) extended, etc.... Sadly, while I know that whatever changes may be wrought by break-in, cable swaps, passive and/or active component changes may not change a spectral analysis, it is unfortunately perceived as such.Go figure. FWIW
Quote from: mfsoa on 14 Feb 2007, 11:08 pmIF cable break in happens, what has been your experience as far as tonal shift?If cable break-in really happened, and the frequency response really did change over time, then that change could be easily measured and there'd be no more discussion about it.--Ethan
IF cable break in happens, what has been your experience as far as tonal shift?
Dunno daj,Its a problem that certainly isn't going to be resolved by pissing contests, but hopefully, folks can come to some sort of common ground by discussion and empirical evaluation.
Sadly, while I know that whatever changes may be wrought by break-in, cable swaps, passive and/or active component changes may not change a spectral analysis, it is unfortunately perceived as such.Go figure. FWIW
I consider myself both an objectivist and a subjectivist, but note neither is capitalized. My major issue with the Subjectivists are that they rarely do any sort of controlled experiments, changing everything en masse, so they don't have a clue as to what is changing what. When a fellow DIYer is available with the same component, I like to be able to do comparisons with only one thing changed.My issue with the Objectivists is they often show the empirical curiosity of a turnip. Due to the definitive and complete education (which is rarely so), they often decide things via 'thought experiments', when something as simple as a dpdt or 4pdt switch might actually provide some valid information.
My issue with the Objectivists is they often show the empirical curiosity of a turnip. Due to the definitive and complete education (which is rarely so), they often decide things via 'thought experiments', when something as simple as a dpdt or 4pdt switch might actually provide some valid information.
Quote from: Occam on 7 Mar 2007, 01:10 amMy issue with the Objectivists is they often show the empirical curiosity of a turnip. Due to the definitive and complete education (which is rarely so), they often decide things via 'thought experiments', when something as simple as a dpdt or 4pdt switch might actually provide some valid information.Yeah, gotta agree with that one. All too often they come in with an overly simplified preconceived notion of how things should be and spend all their time & effort trying to impose & defend that view upon others. For instance, let's take power cords. The objectivist (generalizing a bit) says that as long as the conductors are thick enough it won't make a difference at all, a cord is a cord, Ohm's Law, all it does is conduct the power to the gear and so on. But a power cord isn't just a power cord, it's also an antenna, it'll pick up RFI from the air as well as radiating noise & RF of its own. Don't believe me? Hook up a spectrum analyzer and see all the grunge in the kHz to MHz range. Practically no one mentions that, they just treat a power cord as a simple pure conductor, which it ain't.
With equipment, however, that was designed under idealistic assumptions about the AC power, external measures are almost certainly required. I suppose that in some such cases, the designer has determined that the power will be conditioned externally, but this still leaves open the problem of crosstalk over the power cords between such gear. For instance, the combination of a CD player without power filtering that is plugged into the same outlet as a tube preamp that has a cascode magnetic cartridge gain stage with megahertz bandwidth and an unregulated supply seems likely to suffer audibly from clock injection from the CD player, especially if one or both pieces of gear have suboptimal internal grounding. Still, although a fancy power cord that mainly comprises conductors in a jacket may be somewhat helpful under these conditions, it is going to have a small effect compared to a power conditioner, especially one that isolates each of its outputs from one another. Of course, under these conditions, if a fancy power cord has a genuine noise filtering network built into it (not just the cable parasitics), then it would be a marked improvement over any gauge of plain conductors, whether cabled, braided, shielded, zig-zagged, or dipped in lanolin.