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One of the most outrageous claims to date is that a filter placed on power line takes days to"settle in" thus neatly avoiding an AB test of effectiveness in realtime.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 23 Apr 2009, 04:05 pmThis thread struck a nerve for me because it is the "marketing masquerading as science syndrome". It just leads the consumer to think that engineering and science are pretty much useless tools in developing good sound. That is unhealthy for the industry. It leads to bad products at very high prices. It pretty much insures that high-end audio will forever be a small inconsequential industry.Agreed on all counts.This thread reminds me of another in a different forum a few months ago. As I recall it ended up being locked. Anyway, in that thread someone offered what he claimed was proof that an expensive power conditioner was effective and thus a useful purchase. The "proof" was examining the AC power to an amplifier with and without the filter device connected. With the filter in place there was a miniscule reduction in high frequency grunge on the AC line. So I pointed out that the proper place to look for an improvement is at the amplifier's speaker output terminals. Man was he PO'd at me!
This thread struck a nerve for me because it is the "marketing masquerading as science syndrome". It just leads the consumer to think that engineering and science are pretty much useless tools in developing good sound. That is unhealthy for the industry. It leads to bad products at very high prices. It pretty much insures that high-end audio will forever be a small inconsequential industry.
the easiest Qualitative test I can think of is to look at the powerline waveform on an oscilloscope making note of how much fuzz is riding on the 60Hz sinewave and then looking at it after the filter is in place at the point of entry to your gear. If it takes away some of the fuzz, you have accomplished a level of RFI reduction.
Again, all that matters is what happens at the audio output of your equipment. Most electronic gear is designed well enough to reject normal amounts of junk coming in on the power line. Such junk is a problem only if it ends up at the audio output.--Ethan
the RFI that makes it into the component has the potential to increase intermodulation distortion and it doesn't take much additional IM to result in audible degradation.
I've got to agree with Ethan...If you can't see/find/measure anything on the amplifier output, who cares?-West
you can only measure for what you already know. You cannot measure for a thing you dont (even) know that it exists.
if you do not know that jitter exists, EE will not measure it to explain the harsh beginning of the CD era, EE even proofed at that time that digital sounded better!! Still most people could easily hear the rotten sound of digital and those massive amount of subjective data forced the industry to find eventually the jitter phenomena.
Very possible is the fact it does sound better but industry does not yet know what to measure for.
Quote from: kyrill on 27 Apr 2009, 10:32 amyou can only measure for what you already know. You cannot measure for a thing you dont (even) know that it exists.It is very easy to measure audio for parameters that are not yet known! Not that there are any. But it's not only possible, but easy. The method is called a null test, where the output of the Device Under Test (DUT) is subtracted from its input.Your defence is (still) locked in the domain of previous thinking. The device that measures is NOT an intelligent all knowing observer. It is a "dumb" machine pre-programmed and pre instructed, in fact it is only designed to only measure variables that the machine can handle. Anything that is beyond the existing knowledge of the engineer is not part of that machine. It surprises me that you cannot let loose the idea that man cannot measure for what he does not know yet. Another example than the jitter example. Some years ago in Switzerland Bayer a pharmaceutical multinational spilled hectoliters of a purple liquid on the dockside of the river during loading on ships . Tens of thousands of fish were killed and that river ends its journey through Germany into Holland to meet the sea in Rotterdam. Amsterdam purifies a part of that water of the river Rine for tap water. So an engineer wanted to know how many ppm of that chemical was in the water intake into their purifier systems. The rapport made by the local staff showed zero ppm of that compound: 0 ppm. Until a clever local engineer uttered, maybe the machine was never designed to find that chemical. They had to change the machine in order to measure for that chemical. It shows machines can only measure for what they are intended for. And your EE reasoning reaches all compassing knowledge in the sentence ( see red) Any artifacts or other differences - whether expected or not - are easily seen. And since the differences are isolated from the music, they can be easily analyzed. This technique has been known for many years, which is why I'm confident there are no new parameters. Of course BUT only within the limits of the existing machine -->knowledgeQuoteif you do not know that jitter exists, EE will not measure it to explain the harsh beginning of the CD era, EE even proofed at that time that digital sounded better!! Still most people could easily hear the rotten sound of digital and those massive amount of subjective data forced the industry to find eventually the jitter phenomena.This is not at all what happened with early digital. ?? Are you sure this is wide based consensus?Jitter has never been an audible problem. My Artifact Audibility Report lets you assess for yourself the audibility of soft artifacts like jitter, and I urge you read it and listen to the examples. The crystal oscillator in even the cheapest motherboard sound card or Walkman CD player is literally 1,000 times more stable than any analog tape deck or LP turntable. Yet you never hear people complain about those analog technologies. Just yesterday I had occasion to analyze the stability of a very expensive turntable. Besides constant wow that was easily seen (if not heard) using digital audio software, the overall speed varied by 1/4 second from one play to another over only five minutes. you compare apples with oranges. digital jitter in consumer machines is not heard as wow and flutter in the digital domain but as lack of depth, and musicality and added electronic harshnessWhen CDs first came out, the vast majority of consumers - and audio professionals ( that is a REAL pity and product of expensive marketing techniques) ) - accepted them as vastly superior to LPs and cassettes. But there are two reasons early digital sounded "harsh" to some (some??) people:1) They weren't used to hearing a truly flat and extended high end response, so compared to cassettes and LPs the CDs sounded harsh.This is a very arrogant and false statement for what they and I heard Why?Dear Ethan ALL PEOPLE listen ALL DAY long to the the most extended and perfect HIGH END systems EVERY DAY of THEIR LIFE. It is such a PERFECT system that no manufacturer can even dream of even coming close: REAL LIFE SOUND. This is a reference build in us long before we are 5 years old. Just compare whatever system you listen to to what you normally hear. Some audio engineers are so theoretical that they live completely bypassing this reference. Others and me for instance Hary Pearson from the Absolute Sound, do not compare LP's to Cd's but each apart to real life performances. Until today it is still obvious the LP out performs any cd to that regard. 2) Some early CDs were made from the same masters that were used for LP records. When mastering LPs, engineers add high-frequency limiting to avoid burning out the expensive cutter head. This limiting can also add a glassy sheen to the high end, which some people to this day mistake as LPs sounding "better" than CDs. LP masters also have high frequency boost to overcome the HF loss on the inner grooves. So when the processed tapes were transferred to CD, they were indeed harsher than the original masters. But engineers soon realized they didn't need to do that extra stuff for CDs, and this has never been an issue since.Well so much for your golden ears [quote]Very possible is the fact it does sound better but industry does not yet know what to measure for.
kyrill,The only way to win this battle is to not to fight it.Scotty
Yes, he was fighting a losing battle.