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This seems to be an interesting and honest appraisal , as far as it goes.Suppose you were going to buy a car. You test drive one then another. For arguments sake, lets say you were impressed by both but bought one for whatever reason- perhaps it was less expensive.Now, if only you could have purchased both cars, I'm of the opinion that you would have ended up preferring one over the other for reasons not readily apparent in the test drive. Perhaps the same thing would happen with toasters.The test drive ( with anything) can't possibly simulate the myriad of ways anything will be used, or resonded to, over the long run. Experience with something usually defines its usefulness or appropriateness for each individual.So, IMO, short evaluations are best to demonstrate rather substantial differences between things. In audio, subtle differences are basically the name of the game ( excepting loudspeakers) . The standard for something being *better*or *different*( assuming enough power etc.)is often rather small and elusive.So, given time, different electronics etc. would the results be different. I really don't know but it may be the only real way for an audiophile to determine whether any expenditure is really worth it to the only person that counts, THEM.
Quote from: Lancelot on 5 Feb 2009, 01:48 amThis seems to be an interesting and honest appraisal , as far as it goes.Suppose you were going to buy a car. You test drive one then another. For arguments sake, lets say you were impressed by both but bought one for whatever reason- perhaps it was less expensive.Now, if only you could have purchased both cars, I'm of the opinion that you would have ended up preferring one over the other for reasons not readily apparent in the test drive. Perhaps the same thing would happen with toasters.The test drive ( with anything) can't possibly simulate the myriad of ways anything will be used, or resonded to, over the long run. Experience with something usually defines its usefulness or appropriateness for each individual.So, IMO, short evaluations are best to demonstrate rather substantial differences between things. In audio, subtle differences are basically the name of the game ( excepting loudspeakers) . The standard for something being *better*or *different*( assuming enough power etc.)is often rather small and elusive.So, given time, different electronics etc. would the results be different. I really don't know but it may be the only real way for an audiophile to determine whether any expenditure is really worth it to the only person that counts, THEM.Nicely said.
I swore to myself that I wan't gonna post in this thread but I find the need to respond to this opinion with one of my own. I was told early on from the audio gods that 90% of good audio can be gotten with good gear early on and w/o breaking the bank but as you climb to that last 10%, you quickly reach the point of diminishing returns, or in other words, you end up paying a whole lot for a lot less. There are many many things that can be catagorized as that last 10%, I feel power cords, actually any cable in general falls into this catagory. My personal opinion is that these little tweaks such as power cords are subtle improvements at best but as with anything, the more of these diminishing return tweaks you add, the more increased % of system performance is realized. So to say upgraded power cords are a costly tweak with little benefit is probably spot on but when taken into account the total system performance of everything else that is done to enhance ones system, it all has an accumulative effect that in the long run does infact improve one's audio quality quite substantially. Whether it's worth it to go after the last 10% of diminishing return gain is really up to the individual. That's my understanding and I have my system as an example of this understanding along with my credit card debt as proof positive of diminishing returns. Thanks Frank! Cheers,Robin
...and my assistant had the opposite opinion) I would look into the issue further
Quote from: bwaslo on 5 Feb 2009, 05:59 pmHi Frank,Quote...and my assistant had the opposite opinion) I would look into the issue furtherDid your assistant also take a blind test like you did and if so, what was his score in identifying which was which, or which trials used the same cable? Your 4 out of 4 (or maybe more accurately, 4.5 out of 5?) is impressive, but again it is an extremely small sample size. I'm sure no one would want to sit and do this for a hundred or more trials, but if your assistant did another 5 trials, it would at least double the sample size.
Hi Frank,Quote...and my assistant had the opposite opinion) I would look into the issue furtherDid your assistant also take a blind test like you did and if so, what was his score in identifying which was which, or which trials used the same cable? Your 4 out of 4 (or maybe more accurately, 4.5 out of 5?) is impressive, but again it is an extremely small sample size. I'm sure no one would want to sit and do this for a hundred or more trials, but if your assistant did another 5 trials, it would at least double the sample size.
In contrast, when I repeated the test with three tries with my assistant, he liked the stock power cord better.
Then we ran a five test blind evaluation. My assistant was told to connect one of the DACs making sure I could not tell which was connected. The music was then started and I listened. After each test my assistant was told to either change DACs or not change DACs as he felt like it, except for the last test he was told to definitely change DACs, but never would I know from what to what. I made notes as follows after each of five tests.
Unfortunately for AVA owners, Frank has decided not to implement an IEC and has stated his reasons quite nicely, I thought.
Quote from: BobM on 5 Feb 2009, 06:16 pmUnfortunately for AVA owners, Frank has decided not to implement an IEC and has stated his reasons quite nicely, I thought.I don't feel it's unfortunate. I don't particularly want an IEC socket.I've done my own sighted tests with power cords and heard zero difference. (Frank heard no difference in a sighted test either.)Given the lack of positive results, I am not terribly motivated to do any further, more rigorous testing of power cords. I'd much rather listen to music than to power cords. I have also had several people demonstrate fancy power cords to me. In each case I have not heard the things that the other person heard (or thought they heard).
After trying a number of cords, ICs, and speaker cables over the past two years, what I've found is that in the vast majority of cases these things make very little difference. Changes to electronics, tubes, and room acoustics all make, in my opinion, a more meaningful change.However, after reading countless posts about how cables make absolutely no difference, here is a thread where Frank says that he could in fact tell the difference. The value he places on those differences, that's a subjective thing. That he could tell the difference, that's very, very objective.Thanks Frank. For those who say that cables make no difference, it would be nice if that condescending, nearly vitriolic cable bashing that sometimes happens, I hope that stops. I wish some people would stop implying that others only *think* they hear things. Maybe that's true for the vast majority of cables. Or maybe it isn't true. Hey, Frank heard it, and so did his assistant, and it's not his fault that you can't hear it.As for rigorous A/B testing for everything, I'll challenge you guys to do something.Take a look at this article:http://www.fraudwasteabuse.com/2007/04/pepsi-vs-coke.htmlI've read about this phenomenon before. The basic problem comes down to taste memory. Turns out we're bad at taste memory in the same way that we're bad at auditory memory. If you were to drink from three similar things (Pepsi vs Coke vs No-Name Brand), it's much more difficult to distinguish the three than if you were to drink from only two things (Pepsi vs Coke). In fact, if you put three glasses down, but (say) you filled 2 with Pepsi and 1 with Coke, you'd likely have just a difficult time as if you included the no-name brand as the third option.So yeah, I can't tell the difference between Coke and Pepsi in a test like this, in a blind A/B(/C) test. But do I like Coke better than Pepsi? Yeah, I do like Coke better than Pepsi, and I don't need an A/B test to confirm that for me.
First it adds an additional unnecessary set of contacts to the power system. How many of you have ever had your computer or hard drive just quit in the middle of something because the power cord lost contact? I have and did not like the result.