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Audio Empire wrote:
On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 08:03:43 -0800, Sebastian Kaliszewski wrote (in article ): Audio Empire wrote: On Tue, 1 Mar 2011 14:05:25 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message I can't answer that except to say again, that there is no reason to expect that any two DACs would sound the same. Seems very unscientific. Appears to totally reject the well-known and widely accepted belief that the ear has thresholds for perception of noise and distortion. No, my statement does not in any way reject that premise. However, it is being found that these thresholds are not fixed and can not only vary greatly from individual to individual but can be affected in a single individual by levels of stress, and other psychological variables of human emotional response. Yes, but that does not change the facts that there are limits to those tresholds anyways. In a similar way, some men could run much faster than others, especially after proper training, nutrition, preparations before run, etc. But it doesn't change the reality that about 25mph is absolute top human speed. And creating a device wchich would outrun every athlete, even the best ones, is pretty easy. Many examples in the scientific literature where even very dissimilar DACs and ADCs were compared without positive results. While that's true, it doesn't, in and of itself, prove anything. Remember the scientific axiom: "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence". While DBT results are useful (especially when a positive result is returned or when negative results proves a physical or mathematical prediction), negative results that do not support an otherwise provable result, are just that; negative results. But in this case we have apropriate "physical or mathematical prediction"... FR is flat within +/-0.2dB (better than some combinations of cable+speaker), and in most significant 35Hz-10kHz it's +/-0.1dB, THD+N is down below -110dB, IMD is down below -100dB, phase response is flat, ringing is down -80dB, preringing is even less, jitter is below 1ns, etc. That's not what I meant. I meant that in the case of cables, for instance, the physics tells us that cannot be any difference between cables and interconnects and that they can have no "sound". The physics says that this is so, and the maths performed on any cable for which we have specs (resistance/ft, capacitance/ft, inductance/ft) allows us to calculate the impedance of that cable at any frequency. From "DC" to at least 20 KHz, we can see that any speaker cable and any interconnect on the market , in any of the lengths commonly used in home audio, that these conductors have absolutely no effect on the signal passing through them. The DBTs confirm what we already know. Now show me the same sort of physics and maths that predicts that all A/D, D/A and amplifier circuits will sound the same irrespective of design, component quality, or build quality. To be exact, in the case of cables physics tells us they're same sounding if the connections are good, thickness is within sensible range, etc. Interconnect in which there is a cold bond bewteen a cable and a connector might sound a bit strange ![]() parameters are within range. Now physics and psychoacustics predict that all A/D, D/A and applifier circuits sound the same given their parameters are within range. Getting withing range is significantly easier in case of cables, of course. But that doesn't preclude both improperly made cable (there are such) as well as properly made active component (with parameters withing range). [...] Anybody who can't hear the difference between a Benchmark, an Antelope, and a DCS Scarlatti DAC/Master clock combo, simply isn't paying attention. No, they're simply doing good bias-controlled listening tests. That's an assumption not in evidence - on several fronts. First, you are assuming that proper bias controlled tests haven't been performed, I might remember things wrong and I could miss some test descriptions of yours, but from what I remember you descrived one DBT of three DAC's you discuss few paragraphs above. But from what I rememeber, some claimed results had no statisticaly significant backing. Also, as far as I remember, statistical analysis iself (not its claimed results) and full set of each test results of all participants (not just one person( were not given to you and that person conducting the test was an representative of a party interested in demonstrating that $$$$$ components are sonically improved against $$ components. I heard a difference. between the DACs as did some others. No, I did not get to see the tabulated results, as I said a few months ago. Whether I or anyone else "got it right" with any statistical certainty is unknown to me. But the fact that I found it fairly easy to distinguish one DAC from another has made me mighty skeptical of the "All DACs sound alike" school. Since then I have lived with both a DCS Scarlatti/DCS Master Clock box as well as the Antelope Zodiac, and they do different things to the same digital source on long term listening (I've already established to my satisfaction in a DBT that they are "different" and now the long-term testing in my system tells me what those differences are), and it ain't subtle!. Well, I've maybe written about this before, but I'm not sure. Anways... Some (not very long) time ago my friend tried to decide which aplifier to buy (as his pevious one showed aging problems). He took 3 amplifiers home and wanted to check them. He also wanted to consult with someone other which would be the right buy, so invited me to listen to them. So the informal test begun. We compared amp A with amp B. Amp B seemd to sound nicer -- "sweeter" and more "musical". So we compared B against C -- again C sounded nicer again (again "sweeter" and more "musical"). So compared C against A (to close the cycle). And, funili enough, it was A which souned nicer. One could repeat the test and it was the same -- next applifier souned nicer in each compared pair ![]() then it was again, the second one of each tested pair souned nicer. So far with such kind of evaluation. Results were clearly in our brains (and most probably short and mid term musical memory) not in the equipment. I'm not ignoring it. Had I wanted to do that, I would have left out that part of the quote (as some who post here would have, no doubt, surely done). I agree that the burden of proof is on those of us who are skeptical of Meyer and Moran's (or any of the other null-result tests of this particular premise) result. I just don't know how to go about testing that hypothesis in a scientific manner. IOW, if one is sure that DBTs aren't reliable for this kind of test because one is 100% sure that DACs sound different and that those differences make themselves known only over time, how does one prove it to the satisfaction of all concerned? Well, DBT could be performed over long periods of time (even days or weeks). It needs some preparations, but is doable. Setup two devices being compared, set their gain to measuredly same level (within 0.1dB), and connect them to the same source and allow them to work concurrently. Only put blind randomized switch to their outputs. Turn the random switch at the beginig of the session/day/week/other listening period, when, after comfortable time of otherwise normal usage of the sysem, you feel you know which output of which device is passed by a switch (and which is blocked) note down your answer and then check what was real switch setting and note down wether your answer was right or wrong. Something like this: http://www.amazon.co.uk/product-revi...owViewpoints=1 simple device allows to split digital signal coming from one source to inputs of two devices. Alternatively, if those DACs do not show the level of the incoming signal or indicate wether incoming signal is present (or is non zero) one could switch the inputs as well. There should be about 15 or more such sessions to get statistically significant results, so the whole test could take a while, but it doesn't make it impossible to perform. rgds \SK -- "Never underestimate the power of human stupidity" -- L. Lang -- http://www.tajga.org -- (some photos from my travels) |
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