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I think the main problem is that there are some offended that things are measurable.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 10 Apr 2007, 08:15 pmI think the main problem is that there are some offended that things are measurable. Interesting take. I can only explain my own views, but I assure you I am not offended by anything said here. Even when I get indignant it's not personal.I don't think anyone doubts that parameters of audio are measurable. I think the operative differences focus on how many parameters there are that cannot be measured. Some folks think there are such dimensions and others do not. One of my big difficulties with the "we can measure it" camp is what value that might have. The end-user asks the question "what will this sound like" (predictive) and the response is "let's hear it first, then try to quantify reasons why it sounds that way" (descriptive). Whether it is possible to describe sound after the fact is useless to the person asking the question. Yes, in the long run the descriptive can help an engineer, but not the prospective buyer.There are a couple of questions wrapped together which are being treated as one. This question has come up many times before, with the usual suspects taking expected arguments. I've never seen it spun under the "synergy" label but it seems little different than any of the previous discussions.Maybe the phrasing should be a little different "can measurements predict synergy" instead of the original thread post, spinning the age-old question into something that consumers might be able to use.
What wasn't measurable 50 years ago is measurable now or is measured more accurately. It follows that 50 years from now there will be more accurate and comprehensive measuring tools than are available now. Science keeps progressing so technicians might think that their instruments are the cat's meow now but they will probably be looked upon as being rather crude in the not too distant future.Raj
"I think the main problem is that there are some offended that things are measurable. I'm not sure why that is an issue. It doesn't hurt my feelings either way. "That is an interesting observation Kevin and one that I would agree with, but I also readily admit that I do not understand why people get offended. d.b.
They might be up to the task but still the ultimate testing instrument is the ear. If it doesn't sound good then it really doesn't matter what the instruments say. Correct me if I'mquantum mech wrong but I don't believe that the testing gear available takes into account anics and the influence of subatomic particles on sound. Perhaps such phenomena as the sense of air and space that many hear when using tube gear but not feel/hear when using solid state amps could be explained with more sophisticated lab gear.Raj
Quote from: Dan Banquer on 10 Apr 2007, 10:25 pm"I think the main problem is that there are some offended that things are measurable. I'm not sure why that is an issue. It doesn't hurt my feelings either way. "That is an interesting observation Kevin and one that I would agree with, but I also readily admit that I do not understand why people get offended. d.b. I am not sure that it is so much being offended.How many people do you know that have access to or have a lab with all of the necessary equipment to perform said tests (assuming one even has the knowledge to use the data)?Therefore, when trying to purchase an amp to go with speakers, as an example, going on what little data is available from the manufacturer the majority would have to use their ears as a reliable source for what works and what does not.In cases such as this the numbers(specs) the average consumer has to make descisions on are basically worthless IMO.Hence we have comments such as "2 amps that measure the same sound different".Lin
Kevin,Do you have enough confidence in your numbers that you could design a speaker to the best measurements you could get and then put it on the market without ever listening to it? If the numbers are that good then the human ear test is just superfluous. Of course I doubt that you would ever do that, it's just a discussion point.Raj
They might be up to the task but still the ultimate testing instrument is the ear. If it doesn't sound good then it really doesn't matter what the instruments say. Correct me if I'm wrong but I don't believe that the testing gear available takes into account quantum mechanics and the influence of subatomic particles on sound. Perhaps such phenomena as the sense of air and space that many hear when using tube gear but not feel/hear when using solid state amps could be explained with more sophisticated lab gear.Raj
I'm not sure whether this is off topic or not...but I thought I'd ask, and people could ignore it if they wanted.I was sitting around thinking about how we know how much measurement can tell us about how something sounds. And I wondered whether anybody has ever run the following kind of experiment, and whether it would reveal anything.Suppose I played a a real piano, or guitar, or violin. And I took a comprehensive set of measurements of those sounds. The measurements are recorded, and the sounds themselves are also recorded.Then I go to my computer, and somehow convert those measurements into a simulation of the sound. Now, if the measurements are truly capturing EVERYTHING I care about in the music, then the measurements alone should enable me to recreate a perfect facsimile of the sound. And that should mean that if I play back the recorded sounds and play back the facsimile that I have created, I should not be able to tell the difference between the two. If I can distinguish between the facsimile and the recoding of the actual sounds, it would suggest that something other than what was measured is relevant to the sound. Does this comparison seem valid? Or are there too many variables for which I cannot control (like failures in the recording process of the original sounds)? Chad
Quote from: chadh on 10 Apr 2007, 11:49 pmI'm not sure whether this is off topic or not...but I thought I'd ask, and people could ignore it if they wanted.I was sitting around thinking about how we know how much measurement can tell us about how something sounds. And I wondered whether anybody has ever run the following kind of experiment, and whether it would reveal anything.Suppose I played a a real piano, or guitar, or violin. And I took a comprehensive set of measurements of those sounds. The measurements are recorded, and the sounds themselves are also recorded.Then I go to my computer, and somehow convert those measurements into a simulation of the sound. Now, if the measurements are truly capturing EVERYTHING I care about in the music, then the measurements alone should enable me to recreate a perfect facsimile of the sound. And that should mean that if I play back the recorded sounds and play back the facsimile that I have created, I should not be able to tell the difference between the two. If I can distinguish between the facsimile and the recoding of the actual sounds, it would suggest that something other than what was measured is relevant to the sound. Does this comparison seem valid? Or are there too many variables for which I cannot control (like failures in the recording process of the original sounds)? ChadThat is somewhat possible.The most limiting componet is loudspeakers.You have to reallize that when listening to a piano (or anything else) in a room that you have sound reaching you from every direction and the result is a complex soundfield that a single loudspeaker cannot create.So to perform such an experiment you would want to use an anechoic environment and I think you would be suprised by the outcome.There have been experiments done creating complex soundfields with speaker systems called 'linear arrays'.This is a row of loudspeakers placed very close to each other that can reproduce a complex soundfield.So far these have only been one dimensional arrays which are still not capable of completely replicating an acoustic field but even still the results are said to be uncanny.