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Even within the AT150's there have been variations - the AT150E - 540mH/767ohm, AT150EA 358mH/488ohm (both are Japan only eliptical versions - with purportedly the same body as the MLX)Within that family of bodies there seem to be 3 differint modelsMost of the p-mount versions use 565mH/770ohm and 530mH/660ohm, and the 1/2" versions seem split between 350mH/530ohm, 490mH/770ohm - but the lines are blurred and sometimes one of the other engines crops up where it is not expected!
Oh my, that's kind of amazing, but makes digitizing even more suspect. Before I forget I want to tell you about the Philips golden ear challenge. This is ear training similar (supposedly) to what Philip's techs go through. I think you'll find it interesting. The first post has the link:http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=124269.0The thread got kind of silly, contentious, and it turns out that some phones are much easier than others, to pass the tests. Not sure how valid this is, but it might be interesting to compare to your speakers. This comes to mind because I'm skeptical. How in the world could you not hear the differences, or have differences greatly reduced, with only the volume normalized? I know some of the carts you own and I'm sure you can hear differences even when the volume is precisely the same. At this point there's only one thing that makes sense to me and I've already said it.neo
The interesting thing is that I could differentiate quite clearly and quickly between them before they were normalised, but not after they were normalised.So it indicates not that there is a digitisation problem - as otherwise the differences would be obfuscated in the first step (digitisation) - but the differences were hidden only in the second (normalisation) step.David
Here is a link to the ZYX information referenced above. http://www.zyx-audio.com/technology_sup.htmlThis is an argument against 16/44.1 native recording which is less valid when 24/96 and 24/192 technology is in use.Scotty