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Has anyone, anywhere, ever done a blind test between speaker wire and been able to tell the difference? For example $2000 speaker wires vs $10 Monoprice 12 AWG.I would love to be convinced that speaker wire makes a difference (I'm currently considering upgrading my Monoprice wire to something nicer (~$100), though at this point it's purely for aesthetic reasons). Seems like it wouldn't be that hard to do the test. If a speaker wire has certain sonic characteristics shouldn't it be easily identifiable by just listening?
Without listing percentages, I feel that speakers have the biggest impact on how a sytem sounds. I have noticed dramatic improvements when changing amps, preamps, and DACs, but overall, the biggest improvements usually come from speakers (in my experience). I'm an Electrical Engineer (if that matters) and understand both sides of the argument in this thread, but personal experience has shown speakers to be the most important component. I wouldn't put a $10,000 amp on $1,000 speakers, and I most likely wouldn't power $10,000 speakers with a $1,000 amp. Ignoring sound treatment, I like to have somewhat of a balanced system, dedicating half of my budget to speakers and the other half to source, DAC, preamp, and amp.
Its not uncommon for a person who selects Salk to come on here and say "I was ready to splurge for 6K HT3's but Jim sold me on some 3K HT1-TLs."
You do have an agenda, and thats to sell your speakers to anybody that stumbles into the lair of your misinformation on the whole hobby. I guess the whole scheme is to get people to spend all their money on your speaks. Hey all the power to you. But in all fairness your scheme sits right in the face many people who take this hobby seriousily. So if you don't mind, sources, cables and anything other than speakers do play a big role, a much bigger role than you will let your potential buyers in on...
Everybody just ignore Nuance....... not only is he a troll but he's a dumb one.......
Let me extend this question to all audio components...Are there any blind tests that show a clear ability to distinguish two DACs?... amps?... speakers?!?... etcYou always hear about blind tests showing that audio component X isn't distinguishable from component Y (eg. http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=70893.0 or http://www.matrixhifi.com/ENG_contenedor_ppec.htm), but what rigorous tests show a clear difference?Just to be clear, I'm not doubting that differences exist in these other areas (I performed my own blind test with two DACs and was able to spot the difference), but I'm curious what scientific studies have been done.
Back on topic Let me extend this question to all audio components...Are there any blind tests that show a clear ability to distinguish two DACs?... amps?... speakers?!?... etcYou always hear about blind tests showing that audio component X isn't distinguishable from component Y (eg. http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=70893.0 or http://www.matrixhifi.com/ENG_contenedor_ppec.htm), but what rigorous tests show a clear difference?Just to be clear, I'm not doubting that differences exist in these other areas (I performed my own blind test with two DACs and was able to spot the difference), but I'm curious what scientific studies have been done.
Since you mentioned the words “rigorous tests”, it brings up a favorite subject of mine. Just how do you design a blind listening test that can be readily accepted by both believers and non-believers? I have seen results of listening tests discussed on audio forums, and they always bring out attacks from doubters. You have to arm yourself with lots of data to fight off those attacks.
But that alone doesn’t answer the question of how many people actually respond YES they hear a difference when A and B are genuinely different. You might think it is 100%, but it almost never is. The same goes for how many people respond NO they do not hear a difference when A and B are identical. Again, you’d think that should be 100%, but again it almost never is. Without those two control tests (a positive and negative control), any test of two items whose audible difference is unknown and being tested won’t mean very much.
Good questions. Personally, I'm not so concerned with having a test be universally accepted. I just like having the information to digest, and people can interpret it however they like. Even a test with obvious issues can reveal some interesting things if it's interpreted with some common sense, IMO.
There is just so much to respond to: I don't know where to begin. I think Jim and floresjc gave the best explanations, and they echo exactly how I feel, so I will just say a big +1 to the cognitive dissonance explanation. But no matter what you or I believe, the only person that has to be happy is you. If you feel product A makes a huge difference, or product B is a scam - great! We might disagree, but your system has to make you happy; not me. The problem I have (and its a well known pet peeve of mine) is when someone comes onto these forums and pushes their opinions as fact, claiming this and that is the only way to go, and calling people dumb if they don't agree (like werd did to me). This is when I'll debate the topic, asking for proof. If you are going to talk the talk, you' better be able to back it, especially when what you (we) say can influence the decision making process of a potential buyer. With that said, there is no reason we cannot debate peacefully. Sure, they are certain individuals that are trolls and won't stop pushing their wild agendas, but I think we can see through their charade and choose to ignore them. If you want to lump me into that category, I am okay with that; its your decision. Just remember: you don't win a debate by claiming what you hear/see/think is fact, and writing off everything else. You win by providing the facts and the truth, with some actual data to back it up. Now, let's have fun, and in a peaceful manner (I am as much to blame as anyone else, I can admit it).