0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 39972 times.
As far as I am concerned this is nothing more than a power resistor, and until I know what other measurements I can do to prove otherwise, I am going to leave it at that.
I obviously don't know for sure
A black gate probably measures like a typical hq electrolytic in terms of LCR and transfer functions
Jim,You don't know yet but there is a lot you can learn if your interested.
As I detailed in my earlier post this thread it would be near impossible for this device to work as claimed.Check it out and see why.
could you be anymore condescending
a little heavy on claims, little light on proof/substance, if you ask me.
If I can cobble together an assemblage of microhenry inductors, milli-ohm resistors.and pico-farad capacitors into a filter that sounds the same for under twenty-five dollars the cost of the Bybee is unsupportable
Daryl, you left out a category of distortion type. Transient dynamic non-linearity.Check out the work of Richard C. Heyser as chronicled in the JAES.
I'm not trying to be cheeky
Seriously, I'm not being smart but rather than argue about how to test a Bybee, how about replicating the effect that people hear? I'll buy one. (I don't have a Bybee to compare to but I'm sure many would be willing try it out)
The effect is simply a placebo effect.
The AA thread is funny. You can't have it both ways,first the resistor type andPPM noise contribution doesn't matter and the next thing you know the resistor currently used is the most exotic on the planet, which of course makes what ever the device does more effective. I will allow as how you can probably hear the effect of inserting a passive component such as the bybee into the signal path, but the explanation for why you may observe a change in the sound for good or ill only feeds into the audiophile's need to hear a complicated pseudo-scientific story to provide a reason for purchasing such an expensive piece of ______. If I can cobble together an assemblage of microhenry inductors, milli-ohm resistors.and pico-farad capacitors into a filter that sounds the same for under twenty-five dollars the cost of the Bybee is unsupportable. Daryl, you left out a category of distortion type. Transient dynamic non-linearity.Check out the work of Richard C. Heyser as chronicled in the JAES. * TIME DELAY SPECTROMETRY edited by John R. Prohs. Thirty-two articles of the works of Richard C. Heyser on measurement, analysis, and perception. Reprinted from the pages of the Journal of the Audio Engineering Society and other publications in the field, including Audio magazine and IREE Australia. The anthology serves as a memorial to the author's work and as fundamental material for future developments in audio. It will undoubtedly provide the stimulus for expanded discussion. 280 pages Audio Engineering Society Storehttp://www.aes.org/publications/anth.cfmScotty
Daryl,I really wish I had known all this before engineering school and my subsequent career at one of the top 3 high-energy physics research labs. Everything would have been so much easier if I could have simply tossed out any non-linear and chaotic effects and just have stuck with the simple instrumentation, measurments and linear relationships.See, my problem is that I just can't seem to get past the notion that reality is a lot harder to model and understand than it apparently is. After all, this audio thing is just plain simple: convert some simple changes in air pressure to electrical signals, store them on some medium, retrieve theem from that medium, amplify them, and convert back to mechanical energy. Pathetically simple... nothing to it.Sounds like you yearn for those good 'ol days when there was a flat, stationary earth and we only had 3 elements to deal with. The math was so much easier then.Anyway, it is pointless for me to wander down this road on this forum -- especially since most of it comes from a place outside of audio for me and seems to have no chance of entering the box of thoughts that prevail here (and I'm not talking about anything so ridiculous as clever clocks or magic pebbles -- just to be clear.)
...and I'm not talking about anything so ridiculous as clever clocks or magic pebbles...
You hit the nail on the head. Perhaps many if not all audio effects have non linear influences that are not easily quantifiable with most of the current testing equipment.
I'm sure that this really bothers the electronic technicians who simply can't acknowledge any effect that can't be measured with current or readily available equipment. They long for the 19th century.
The only thing I will say to you is to be careful in citing the placebo effect -- it cuts both ways you know.
Quote from: rajacat on 1 Apr 2007, 05:02 pmYou hit the nail on the head. Perhaps many if not all audio effects have non linear influences that are not easily quantifiable with most of the current testing equipment.Perhaps. And perhaps not. Thus far I have not seen any proof of this.QuoteI'm sure that this really bothers the electronic technicians who simply can't acknowledge any effect that can't be measured with current or readily available equipment. They long for the 19th century.But by the same token, those who simply can't acknowledge that there may not be anything at all going on that's actually audible are longing for a century well before the 19th.se
So do you believe that the SOTA of testing equipment has reached its zenith? There is nothing more to learn in science? That is really flat earth thinking!