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In that video the guy says they found an effect they were sure was audible from blind tests, and then they correlated it with a measurement. That's exactly the right way to go about it (although given that they're a manufacturer I'm skeptical about that particular effect). Personally, until I see something like that for break-in (especially of solid-state electronics) I'm just not going to buy into it. TONEPUB's suggestion is perfect - try a proper blind test between two or three otherwise identical pieces of gear, and see what it turns up.
Let's say you buy a brand new DAC and play it out of the box.Opinions please:1: Will the DAC actually sound better after "break-in" time or is this simply an audio myth?2: Assuming that one believes in "break-in" being a true occurence, is there some science behind this belief? What actually happens internally to improve the sound?
Personally, I have experienced sonic changes in components as they break-in that I am pretty darned sure are not artifacts of psychoacoustics. In a recent case, it was a friend's gear, so I got to hear it at roughly 100 hour intervals (all else remained unchanged). On the first visit, there was quite a bit of glare--I was worried about this new amp. These days no more glare. I have no mechanistic explanation, but I suspect there is one waiting to be unraveled.
I imagine that it's real.
I liked the part where he said "could hear quite clearly in BLIND tests..."There is definitely a break in period for most gear and it depends on theparts used. If you ever have the luxury of getting two brand new componentsof the same type, play one for 300 hours and leave one in the box.After 300 hours compare A to B and I guarantee that they will sound different,with the new component sounding a bit more harsh in the high end.
IAnd it doesn't always 'break-in' for the better...twice I heard what I thought was a worsening of the sound
1: Will the DAC actually sound better after "break-in" time or is this simply an audio myth?
Quote from: TONEPUB on 20 Sep 2008, 03:59 amI liked the part where he said "could hear quite clearly in BLIND tests..."There is definitely a break in period for most gear and it depends on theparts used. If you ever have the luxury of getting two brand new componentsof the same type, play one for 300 hours and leave one in the box.After 300 hours compare A to B and I guarantee that they will sound different,with the new component sounding a bit more harsh in the high end.If you were in a situation where you did not know which one (A or B) received the 300 hours of play time, and then could identify which one benefited from the 300 hours with results better than chance, your position would be much stronger, IMO. Trouble is, your A vs. B comparision as you described it has a built-in testing flaw: you know which one is A and which one is B.
And it doesn't always 'break-in' for the better...twice I heard what I thought was a worsening of the sound...or so I thought.
No it doesn't. Everyone I played a and b for didn't know which one was which and the resultswere the same.If you don't want to believe it, don't.Your analogy about the symphony is silly.It's pretty obvious by the snarky comments that you don't have a lot of experience.
Quote from: mjosef on 21 Sep 2008, 12:25 amAnd it doesn't always 'break-in' for the better...twice I heard what I thought was a worsening of the sound...or so I thought. Actually, this is one of the things that has always made me suspect break-in is more imagined than real. If we believe that these electrical components change over time, why would it be the case that those changes are always for the better? I think more experiences of the kind where the sonic performance deteriorates during the first couple of hundred hours would make break-in a more credible phenomenon.Personally, I fall into the camp that doesn't care at all whether break-in occurs. I turn over gear very infrequently, so just about any conceivable break-in period should have passed by the time I start really considering whether I can afford to roll the dice again on another component. But this break-in question probably becomes even less relevant for those who do change gear frequently. If a component takes 500 hours to break in, that's liable to be the best part of a year's listening for many people. For people who change their DACs almost as often as they change their underwear, that's an eternity.Chad Chad