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Prove you can hear it.
With my engineering background in mechanical and electrical, I can say that every material, every alloy assembled by man, nature immediately starts to dis-assemble.
So, if you lack experience in equipment burn in, perhaps you should get some. Until you get some real-world experience, go back to those who tell you what to believe.
If those who have told you what to believe have some scientific proof that equipment cannot possibly break in, then you would have cited those articles, but you cannot, can you? You cannot, because even those who require science have no basis by which to make their claims.
Turkey, I have my own proof--I have experienced it. Get your own.
You have it backwards. You are the one making the extraordinary claim, so the burden of proof lies with you.
The it's in your head argument is pretty tough to swallow. That's a very slippery slope, and ultimately leads you can't trust anything you hear or you believe that certain people are more qualified than you to know what you should hear. I find skeptics tend to lean towards the latter.
Jimi Hendrix was "experienced" and now he's dead.Wayner
So do you get an Audio Mystic to hold a seance and contact Jimi from beyond the grave? Or will a regular Mystic work just as well?
I don't trust my hearing when it comes to things like this. I know I can be fooled or mistaken. I require more proof than that - like the results of controlled tests.
I don't trust my hearing when it comes to things like this.
Jimi Hendrix was "experienced" and now he's dead.
Controlled tests would be great. I certainly wish more time was spent coordinating some instead of wasting bandwidth.
Turkey, under what conditions do you use what you hear as a basis for making a buying decision?
When do you trust what you hear to be real and not an illusion? Does it always take external corroboration from tests and measurements to support any conclusion you may reach?