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Now, it may or may not be true that that two sources delivering similar measured signals will produce similar sounds. If they don't, there are two potential explanations:1) our ability to measure the signal is compromised (measurements may be inaccurate, inappropriate or incomplete); or2) the mapping from signal characteristics to perceived sound quality is discontinuousIn order for us to infer very much about how a component sounds from measured specifications, it would need to be the case that neither of these failures occurs. I have no idea how one would establish either of these propositions. Then again, I'm not sure that one is at very much of a disadvantage if one proceeds assuming these failures do not occur. Chad
Now, it may or may not be true that that two sources delivering similar measured signals will produce similar sounds. If they don't, there are two potential explanations:1) our ability to measure the signal is compromised (measurements may be inaccurate, inappropriate or incomplete); or2) the mapping from signal characteristics to perceived sound quality is discontinuous
Quote from: doug s. on 9 Apr 2008, 01:07 pmi think you are wrong!I have been wrong before - don't tell my wife. Darren
i think you are wrong!
Quote from: doug s. on 9 Apr 2008, 01:07 pmall 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.Don't you mean "liwe musical ewent"? And "ymmw"?By the way, I don't understand your argument at all. It may be true that someone does not like the sound of a perfectly reproduced recording, and prefers to hear the recording reproduced with various distortions. But I don't see why that should imply some discontinuity in the mapping from distortion to perceived sound quality. It would still seem perfectly plausible that two sources that delivered signals that were "close" would sound similar. If this were the case, then Darren's suggestion of blind testing would allow you to determine which particular types of signal imperfections subjectively sound good to you.Now, it may or may not be true that that two sources delivering similar measured signals will produce similar sounds. If they don't, there are two potential explanations:1) our ability to measure the signal is compromised (measurements may be inaccurate, inappropriate or incomplete); or2) the mapping from signal characteristics to perceived sound quality is discontinuousIn order for us to infer very much about how a component sounds from measured specifications, it would need to be the case that neither of these failures occurs. I have no idea how one would establish either of these propositions. Then again, I'm not sure that one is at very much of a disadvantage if one proceeds assuming these failures do not occur. Chad
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: doug s. on 9 Apr 2008, 01:09 pmQuote 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.It does explain it to me Doug, because I listen to recordings I made, and have the knowledge of the what the source sounds like sitting right next to me. So when I change out gear, and listen to my own recording, I know which piece of gear sounds truer to life. Based on my experiences, I have found a direct correlation to equipment specs playing a very important role in how transparent something sounds.
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.
I choose it based on how it sounds, but curiously, the specs and measurents would bear that linearity is what sounds more transparent.Cheers
Quote from: doug s. on 9 Apr 2008, 01:07 pmall 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.I think your assuming only a 100% transparent playback of current (ie: crappy recorded) recordings.Theoretically, if the "ewent" was recorded and/then played back with 100% accuracy with electronic equipment. It would in fact be a perfect duplicate.Cheers
Here's my opinion - nothing is transparent.
while certain audiophile products may do a better job reproducing a recording, even that is a judgment call - others may disagree about which piece is reproducing "better".
I often read about how few of these people's recordings they can listen to because their gear is "too revealing".
Hypothetical - if you were able to pick one system out of two where you absolutely and factually knew one had better specifications and transmitted a more "accurate" sound into your room than the other but for some inexplicable reason the other sounded better, which would you choose?
It is my experience that as the system gets more accurate, the live even becomes more clear and the live emotions come through better and better.
What would you do? Would you unhesitatingly abandon your current equipment (and philosophy) and adopt this radically flawed preamp into your system?
I just recently had such an experience w/ my lowly VAC preamp (their bottom of the line unit). It has made me forget about soundstaging, distortion, accuracy, frequency extension etc. etc. all that stupid crap. It made me not care what anyone else may think about my system. It made me taste the realm beyond all of the audiophile verbiage - a realm that I didn't know existed and had certainly not heard in my home. It makes music. It makes music mean something. How do you measure that?
Accuracy has many dimensions. Of course, a perfectly accurate representation would be to completely capture a performance in the room, including all its dynamic scale, hall sound, instrumental separation, and all the other dimensions that stereo generally fails to convey. My intent was more to what is measured/claimed/parroted when accuracy and transparency are discussed on audio forums. These ethereal qualities are as a matter of course distilled down to a few numbers which are thrust outward in defense of "superior" sound.However, as others have said, there's a lot more to it than that. Once the measurements learn to capture the essence of a piece, I will change my stripes and become a measurements-first guy.
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.