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Ok!I realize now that I will leave it to my own ears to determine the benefit, or lack of, of break-in.
Good point Nathan, we all struggle with exactly those questions. I think we all want to know, with varying amounts of how much. The proffered "answer" is always blind testing but that can of worms is the antithesis of what I find fun in audio. I think a lot of folks feel the same.
Please stop. I don't want to trash the thread, nor do I want to ask you to refrain from posting in Audio Central. Know when enough is enough and stop.
...My personal opinion is that scientists have quite a decent grasp on what's audible and what isn't (not that there can't be surprises still)...
Another scientist here (biologist).Good sense and healthy skepticism are darned useful; deriding others, not so much. Provided there is a plausible mechanism for something being proposed, I consider it worth considering. The guy on the video went from an observed pattern (hearing differences in blind tests) to a mechanistic explanation (microphonics within the component); nice work, I think, explaining the basis for the pattern others have observed for some time and could not previously explain...
My personal experience doing this for about 40 years is science has few if any methods to predict listening pleasure for all this gear, esp speakers, amps, sources, rooms, treatments...did I omit anything? (OTOH I do find purely subjective reveiws of gear to be often just as useless...)Can any reader suggest any spec more useless than the ubiquitous THD in predicting pleasure in listening to a certain amplifier? I doubt it. My friend's custom 300B made treble sounds to die for, like you became one w/ the cymbal's overtone shimmering...you could taste the tonal structure; probably THD was through the roof. Specs are often comically useless.
This is why, ultimately, science & religion are the same.
Quote from: opaqueice on 20 Sep 2008, 08:11 pm...My personal opinion is that scientists have quite a decent grasp on what's audible and what isn't (not that there can't be surprises still)...Could not disagree more. If scientists had reliable methods to predict sound quality there may be no such thing as audio shows. We'd just examine such specs as "soundstage", "imaging", "natural musicality" & pick our gear out that way. Oh? Such specs don't exist? That's interesting...
But then we're no further ahead are we? We haven't learned anything about the gear or our own perceptions. If a person doesn't want to test stuff that's fine, but then they ought not to make claims about factor X causing such and such change in the sound. I'm all for pure subjectivity in music and how it makes us feel, but the realm of electronic playback and what electronics do to signals isn't in that camp. There the scientific method can help us. Otherwise we're just fumbling around in the dark.
Since I am the one who started this thread - I will now, hopefully, be the one to end it!
QuoteSince I am the one who started this thread - I will now, hopefully, be the one to end it! No sense in trying to stop a train. Might as well just get out of the way. Besides, it looks like the conversation is turning metaphysical.
Collectively, I don't think we are any "further ahead". Each of us is on a personal journey. We can learn from virtual places like this but at the end of the day we have to figure out for ourselves what we treasure in our own sound rooms. Our perceptions have value, whether measured or not. If we all subscribed to the scientific method to pass along our gear descriptions AC and every similar place would go VERY quiet overnight. Testing sucks. Nobody wants to do it. And guess what? If you do torture yourself this way and bother to post your findings the very next thing you'll be doing is defending and refining your methodology in the hopes that some day you have a valid test. It's an end in itself, wholly separate from the joy of listening.