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Ah, yes you put it so brutally. Of course it is only your opinion. My opinion is that there are some audio phenomena that engineers have trouble measuring such as perceived space around the instruments and holographic presentation. Now you said that there was just one parameter that mattered and then you proceeded to list two: low noise and distortion. Could your linear mind grasp that there could be other types of measurement that science has yet to discover or are you of the opinion that there is nothing else to learn? Certainly that is not being open minded which I think is a prerequisite for advancement in any scientific endeavor. -Roy
Ask ten race car drivers how they like their car set up and they will alltell you something different as well, so if it just came down to data, raceengineers wouldn't have much to do.
>That is two. Want to add anymore?
Quote from: Steve on 9 Apr 2008, 12:22 am>That is two. Want to add anymore?Hehe, see previous post for clarification.As for proof, that's a strong word. I can't prove a negative...I'm the skeptic here, remember? Convince me, you'll find I am quite open-minded despite the bluster. I'm just putting my opinions out there to see if anyone agrees. (Apparently not, but that's fine. ) Opinions, including mine and yours too, can change but these are mine.Darren
I'm just putting my opinions out there to see if anyone agrees. (Apparently not, but that's fine. ) Opinions, including mine and yours too, can change but these are mine.Darren
Are you talking AB and ABX testing? If so, you are assuming that subjective AB or ABX testing is accurate. Can you prove it is? Can you provide a link to such a test?
Darren, Do you chose your audio equipment on the basis of how it measures or how it sounds?Scotty
Why does amplifier A do a fantastic job with reproducing all the tonaland spatial cues of an acoustic intrument, while amplifier B does not.
Quote from: TONEPUB on 8 Apr 2008, 11:56 pmWhy does amplifier A do a fantastic job with reproducing all the tonaland spatial cues of an acoustic intrument, while amplifier B does not.Not to speak for Darren, but I think you might be missing the point just a little. You're doing precisely what the Porscheophile in his example did - claim that something is true despite all the objective evidence against it. There are effective ways to argue against his position, but yours is not one of them.
As far as Darrens' position is concerned,he hasn't beenparticularly consistent or concise in stating his position and I for one am not entirely sure what he advocates. If one is inclined to believe that all amps sound the same there is little to discuss and we are firmly in Julian Hirsch territory.
opaqueice,I think you saying that Jeff didn't really hear the tonal differences between Amplfier A and Amplfier B that he said he did. In as much as I have also heard differences between amplifiers tonal and spacial presentations I am inclined to believe his statements on this subject.
...What I'm advocating is avoiding phrases like "this source or that amp produces an amazing holographic soundstage". The next statement may sound like nit-picking, but bear with me because the difference is subtle but profound. It is the signal that contains the soundstage, and the amp can only reproduce what is there.Now, I'm sure that's what you guys meant, you would agree with that. But it's a little more than semantics, because when you place the signal at the heart of your philosophy you get a subtle shift in thinking. The subtle shift is realising that all a component needs to do is maintain the signal undistorted, because it's all about the signal. There is no magic powder in a source, IC or amp that you can dust onto the sound to create magic. There is no aura in a box of electronics that can impute grandeur or liquidity into the music. This may sound undramatic, but all the human emotion, sweat, tears and genius of the original musical event is being borne on an electrical signal. Undramatic but, it turns out, just the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. So it takes the mystique away from all this audiophilia and affirms the reality, which is that if a component has low distortion it is by definition better and it's doing all a component can usefully do. If we are asking for more than low distortion from a source, interconnect or amp (provisos stated) we asking for something that is nonsensical.
I choose it based on how it sounds, but curiously, the specs and measurents would bear that linearity is what sounds more transparent.Cheers
i think you are wrong!
all this is great, except i think you are wrong! why? because if everything is 100% perfect, undistorted, transparent, then what you will get is a perfect reproduction of A RECORDING. which may NOT sound the same as the live musical ewent itself. which is why, imo, electrical components that in fact do measure extremely closely, w/near-identical specs of all known engineering parameters, may in fact sometimes sound a lot different.ymmv,doug s.
Quote from: Daygloworange on 9 Apr 2008, 01:14 amI choose it based on how it sounds, but curiously, the specs and measurents would bear that linearity is what sounds more transparent.Cheersexcept that this doesn't explain components whose sound you don't like, tho their specs & measurements are equal or better to what you do like... doug s.