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Audio dealers may have experienced differences between like models and believe they have witnessed "break-in". I quess I can't blame them, but I think what they are hearing is tolerance differences between pieces. We all know that resistors, capacitors, transformers all have tolerances. Some are going to be on the high side of the "perfect value", others on the low side. So if we imagine this assembly line making power amplifiers, to some very small degree, they could all sound different as the components within them have tolerances that are all over the place and hense, a slightly different sound.
Over time, things corrode, wear and build up crude (like in volume, balance, tone controls) and affects the sound. This, again is not break-in, but break down.
On the topic of "eye witnesses" hearing the changes, I have several attorney friends that will tell me that "eye-witnesses" are not reliable. They all see things or hear thing or think things from a different perspective. DNA is much better!
Anyway, this is a great discussion and I'm sure I won't change any minds and that's OK. We all have our belief systems. I use mine until it's proven wrong and then I jump to the next one.The one thing I'm sure of is that the more I learn the more I don't understand. We certainly live in a very complex world.Wayner
Where do you make the recording from? The output of the preamp or the speakers? And to Pez's point of view, did the recording instrument break-in and is it's data is now not reliable, corrupt because it is not broken in yet?
Come on people, the Earth is round already. It's round damn it!
Quote from: Danny on 10 Sep 2009, 10:53 pmCome on people, the Earth is round already. It's round damn it! According to historians it started off flat, but it is now round as consequence of having been broken in.
Loudspeakers and vacuum tubes, both being made of a bunch of mechanical parts fitted and fastened together in some sort of way, likely will require a bit of break in time, but how much of this you can really hear has not been examined carefully with double blind testing methodology as far as I know.