0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic. Read 45369 times.
I hate to be so argumentative about this, but if there really was a "right" way to do this, don't youthink after about 40 years now, someone would have figured it out and everyone else would have copied it?
Audiophiles might be on to something when they say amps sound different, or magic pebbles matter, or cables matter, or whatever. But no one is going to know, and no one outside this tiny community will take it seriously, until proper procedures are adopted and proper evidence is found.
I've tried some blind testing and was not good at it - way too stressful. And it was not fun at all, like doing all the cooking and no eating.
By the way (not to get back on topic!), here's my list: 1) listener2) recording3) listener's mood 4) speakers5) room6) type of single malt scotch in listener's hand7) equalization/room correction8 ) source, amplification, cables, preamp, etc.
Sound is way to subjective and has way too many variables.It's like measuring paintings to see if you like Picasso better thanVan Gogh.I've talked to quite a few of the most successful audio designersand they all agree that the tests don't tell the whole story. Youguys are trying to make science out of art and high end audio issomewhat of a mixture of the two.
Daygloworange,believe it or not you can have the same transistor made by 5 different manufacturers and all but one will sound mediocre or bad in the circuit you are designing and only one will be a standout in its' performance. You still have to design by ear to a degree. You can build an entire circuit out of poor sounding parts and have a circuit that measures fine and still sounds like crap. You have to listen to the circuit to know what you have done right or wrong.Scotty
Then at some level, the transistor is not well made. Some unknown (scientifically identified) variable is at the core of the reason why.Our ear is an indicator that there is something wrong, now we turn to analysis to isolate the cause.Science will then be employed to discover it, and science and technology will aid us in overcoming it.Cheers