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#41
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chung wrote in message ...
TChelvam wrote: Dick Pierce wrote in message ... TChelvam wrote: Which "we" are "we" talking about? Or, how about: Manson, W., "Digital Sound Signals: Subjective Effect of Timing Jitter," BBC Research Eng. Div, Great Britain, Monograph 1974/11, 1974. Gee, that's fully 11 years before some "we" discovered jitter. The "we" I was refering to is people like me. Who is looking for great sound at reasonable price. Despite all the arguments for and against tweaks and High resolution format, we are yet to see any one audio engineer who could throw a challenge to whoever claim that their product improve sound. In the name of science, has any of audio engineering society hauled up people who sell Racing Diamond cones or green pen or snake oil? for misleading the public? Have you seen anyone from AMA hauled up people who advertize pills and patches that extend certain parts of your anatomy? Yes, not AMA but the US Attorney General. "Penis enlargement" pills blasted. The Arizona Attorney General, together with the U.S. Customs Service and the Arizona Department of Public Safety, have seized over $30 million in luxury homes, cars, cash, jewelry, and bank accounts throughout Arizona from Michael A. Consoli, Vincent J. Passafiume; and Geraldine Consoli (Michael's mother), who marketed bogus penis enlargement pills over the Internet. Operating as C.P. Direct, Inc., the trio claimed that their product "Longitude" would permanently enlarge the penis by 1-3 inches. A one-month bottle cost $59.95 plus shipping and handling for the first month and $39.95 per month thereafter, even though the company only paid about $2.50 per bottle. [Attorney General, U.S. Customs Service, Arizona Department of Public Safety seize more than $30 million in assets from company selling bogus growth pills. Press release, Arizona Attorney General, May 29, 2002] see here www.ncahf.org/digest02/02-23.html Or do you believe that those treatments work because the AMA really hasn't hauled anybody up? Have you seen any scientific society hauled up the flat-earthers? Or the psychics? Does that lack of action lead you to believe that the earth may be flat? Or that psychics really work? I wasn't born then and most people were not that informative. I used to work in audio instrumentation. I am pronouncing the green pen as snake oil based on my technical expertise. Is that enough proof for you? Yes, that what I am looking for because I can't hear the diffence. But two others could. DBT? Did not really go into it because they are kept coming up with excuses. |
#42
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"Nousaine" wrote in message
news:rViAc.65273$HG.52673@attbi_s53... (TChelvam) wrote: Dick Pierce wrote in message ... TChelvam wrote: Which "we" are "we" talking about? I've challenged manufacturers (refused to perform a promised test when I visited) and retailers (traveled to Florida at my own expense to proctor a challenge that said retailer would prove that he could easily "hear" amplifiers under bias-controlled conditions) and enthusiasts (assembled a fully-tweaked system and recruited subjects for a bias controlled listening test) yet have not found anyone (no single subject) who was able to reliably identify amps/wires and outboard DACs under bias controlled listening conditions. If not for people like you guys, I would have burned a big hole in my pocket when I was shopping for my first SACD. Bought it and it outperformed my high End CD transport and DAC. But I expect you guys to be bold. For an example , name the manufacturer who backed out . I will write to them and ask them what they got to hide. I have done that to two manufacturers and got the answers I was looking for after complaints to various consumer groups nad government organ. (I am not naming them here and atleast one of them is here, because it would do them injustice due to different issues involved.) OK under bias controlled conditions a high-end retailer was unable to reliably identify his multi-kilobuck PASS Aleph monoblock amplifiers vs a used Yamaha integrated amplifier using in his personal reference system using his personally selected program material. Good, my audiophile friend (soon to be ex-friend) got Pass Lab amps and I can access to yamaha receiver( not Amp) and see if it can be the same. I did try with my Amp long time ago but it sounded weak. A high-end salesman, under modest bias controlled conditions (cloth over speaker terminals) was unable to reliably identify upscale speaker cables from zip cord using the very system where he claimed that "pretty amazing" differences were audible. I have already agreed on that issue but in a different context. IMO measurement of jitter hasn't been a problem. But you can check some of this stuff for yourself. Just find 2 devices you think sound different and then have another person help you to test whether the differences can still be heard when you don't know which of the two devices is playing. yes been doing that, but it not according to the DBT standard. So i am not going to claim I will pass DBT with flying colors. |
#44
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chung wrote:
S888Wheel wrote: From: chung Date: 6/17/2004 3:29 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: S888Wheel wrote: And, too, a measurable difference is not necessarily audible. Never said it was. However if there is no measurable differences between two signals then there is nothing to discuss. They will make the same sound with the same associated equipment. The problem, of course, is that usually there is a measureable difference between two components, since our measuring instruments are so sensitive. It is not a problem for the instances in which there is no measurable differrence. My point is that there are very few instances where there is no measureable difference, because of the sensitivity of our test instruments. Care to provide examples where differences are not measureable? I would offer as an example bit-identity of two .wav files....which has not prevented listeners from claiming that they still sound different. In fact, what has happened in that case is lots of time spent trying to find a *differnt* measurement to validate the supposed difference (with 'jitter' usually named, but AFAIK never proved to be, the culprit). -- -S. Why don't you just admit that you hate music and leave people alone. -- spiffy |
#45
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Steven Sullivan wrote:
chung wrote: S888Wheel wrote: From: chung Date: 6/17/2004 3:29 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: S888Wheel wrote: And, too, a measurable difference is not necessarily audible. Never said it was. However if there is no measurable differences between two signals then there is nothing to discuss. They will make the same sound with the same associated equipment. The problem, of course, is that usually there is a measureable difference between two components, since our measuring instruments are so sensitive. It is not a problem for the instances in which there is no measurable differrence. My point is that there are very few instances where there is no measureable difference, because of the sensitivity of our test instruments. Care to provide examples where differences are not measureable? I would offer as an example bit-identity of two .wav files....which has not prevented listeners from claiming that they still sound different. In fact, what has happened in that case is lots of time spent trying to find a *differnt* measurement to validate the supposed difference (with 'jitter' usually named, but AFAIK never proved to be, the culprit). Yes, this is one of the few cases where you can measure no difference, but that's between 2 CD's and probably not what audiophiles were thinking of measuring. And there is speculation that bit-identical CD's may still sound different due to jitter. |
#46
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TChelvam wrote:
chung wrote in message ... TChelvam wrote: Dick Pierce wrote in message ... TChelvam wrote: Which "we" are "we" talking about? Or, how about: Manson, W., "Digital Sound Signals: Subjective Effect of Timing Jitter," BBC Research Eng. Div, Great Britain, Monograph 1974/11, 1974. Gee, that's fully 11 years before some "we" discovered jitter. The "we" I was refering to is people like me. Who is looking for great sound at reasonable price. Despite all the arguments for and against tweaks and High resolution format, we are yet to see any one audio engineer who could throw a challenge to whoever claim that their product improve sound. In the name of science, has any of audio engineering society hauled up people who sell Racing Diamond cones or green pen or snake oil? for misleading the public? Have you seen anyone from AMA hauled up people who advertize pills and patches that extend certain parts of your anatomy? Yes, not AMA but the US Attorney General. Yes, the point is that it's not the scientists/engineers who hauled people up. And despite this action by the Arizona A.G., we're still bombarded with these ads. "Penis enlargement" pills blasted. The Arizona Attorney General, together with the U.S. Customs Service and the Arizona Department of Public Safety, have seized over $30 million in luxury homes, cars, cash, jewelry, and bank accounts throughout Arizona from Michael A. Consoli, Vincent J. Passafiume; and Geraldine Consoli (Michael's mother), who marketed bogus penis enlargement pills over the Internet. Operating as C.P. Direct, Inc., the trio claimed that their product "Longitude" would permanently enlarge the penis by 1-3 inches. A one-month bottle cost $59.95 plus shipping and handling for the first month and $39.95 per month thereafter, even though the company only paid about $2.50 per bottle. [Attorney General, U.S. Customs Service, Arizona Department of Public Safety seize more than $30 million in assets from company selling bogus growth pills. Press release, Arizona Attorney General, May 29, 2002] see here www.ncahf.org/digest02/02-23.html Or do you believe that those treatments work because the AMA really hasn't hauled anybody up? Have you seen any scientific society hauled up the flat-earthers? Or the psychics? Does that lack of action lead you to believe that the earth may be flat? Or that psychics really work? I wasn't born then and most people were not that informative. The Flat Earth Society is still living and kicking, today: http://www.flat-earth.org/ And psychics probably bring in more money than high-end audio does ![]() I used to work in audio instrumentation. I am pronouncing the green pen as snake oil based on my technical expertise. Is that enough proof for you? Yes, that what I am looking for because I can't hear the diffence. So now you have at least one engineer publicly debunking such snake-oil product ![]() But two others could. DBT? Did not really go into it because they are kept coming up with excuses. They probably know in their hearts that they will not pass any rigorous listening test. |
#47
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#48
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Chelvam wrote:
"Nousaine" wrote in message news:rViAc.65273$HG.52673@attbi_s53... (TChelvam) wrote: Dick Pierce wrote in message ... TChelvam wrote: Which "we" are "we" talking about? I've challenged manufacturers (refused to perform a promised test when I visited) and retailers (traveled to Florida at my own expense to proctor a challenge that said retailer would prove that he could easily "hear" amplifiers under bias-controlled conditions) and enthusiasts (assembled a fully-tweaked system and recruited subjects for a bias controlled listening test) yet have not found anyone (no single subject) who was able to reliably identify amps/wires and outboard DACs under bias controlled listening conditions. If not for people like you guys, I would have burned a big hole in my pocket when I was shopping for my first SACD. Bought it and it outperformed my high End CD transport and DAC. But I expect you guys to be bold. For an example , name the manufacturer who backed out . I will write to them and ask them what they got to hide. I have done that to two manufacturers and got the answers I was looking for after complaints to various consumer groups nad government organ. (I am not naming them here and atleast one of them is here, because it would do them injustice due to different issues involved.) For starters, ask any cable manufacturer who states that cables need break-in, or that there is directivity to it (other than the extra grounding lead on some interconnect cables) to provide measurements to back up those claims. |
#49
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If what you say is true, then who is to say that because you could
measure a difference that the difference is audible. It is much easier to just do both at the same time and at the same place. If it registers on the screen and you hear it, then you have your proof. Of course you have evidence of an effect with the measurement, but to really sell the idea of how effective it is, you need to hear it and to measure it in the room. I don't think setting-up a system is all about collecting data, but in getting it to sound right. That may not necessarily make it measure as you would guess or hope. If all we had to do was measure at the source, there would be no need to listen to music, we could just all take your word that it sounds good? Boom boxes all around anyone? Another problem with measuring in general and it really does not matter where, is having the appropriate gear and settings as well as knowing what to measure. Evaluating a cable can be done in free space and with test gear only, no stereo is required. That is not true with acoustics and with mechanical dampening or coupling of the equipment. Sure you could measure output after the device that was modified, but unless it was a board level component that was changed, finding the right thing to measure the right way can be difficult {and in my opinion a total bore and waste of time (sort of like this thread...)}. It boils down to what you can hear and you are, in the end, still better off just listening. If you can't trust your ears, just get a boom box. You only have to satisfy yourself. You are gonna love this one: I had a fellow come in the other day who is looking to find a suitable amplifier to replace his old and unreliable Pioneer receiver. He read on the net that Yamaha made a great integrated amp and he bought one. He hooks it up to his system, the only thing that he has changed, and he hates it. No bass, distorted high frequencies or noise or something that bothers him in that range and of course, a huge disappointment after all the "hype". Should I suggest that he just measure it and shut-up with his belly-aching as there is nothing wrong with that fine amp, but it that it is all in his head? But I digress - just listen. God gave you those funny looking ears - use them. -Bill www.uptownaudio.com Roanoke VA (540) 343-1250 "Nousaine" wrote in message ... Uptown Audio wrote: Ban, You may be overlooking the effect of the acoustic output on the system mechanically and the effect of room acoustics. There are some tweeks such as a form of isolation that will have both audible and measurable results. Obviously not all components would be effected the same way and thus a given form of isolation may only work well on one portion of the system, where it would not have an audible effect on another. You do have to look at the system as a whole to get the acoustic output, plus the loop feedback and room response. I see where you are going with this, but it does limit the measurements to specific components. A good example of a situation where a tweek could not be measured at a cable termination would be an acoustic wall treatment, which could be considered a tweek as it would also effect the sound, but it could not be measured anywhere but in the room of course. It would just be easier to measure what you hear in the room at that point to compare it to what you are hearing for a 1:1. I like the 1:1 scenario best as it allows you to hear and read the results simultaneously and you can be confident that you are actually measuring what you are hearing (or not hearing)... Using a mic in the room, you could verify graphically what was being done with a tweek (a laptop would be easiest to read and have at the listening position). It would also provide rather convincing evidence of the effectiveness of a particular tweek as the original poster had pondered. It would still not provide a "better or worse" evaluation from a subjective standpoint, just a result. Hey, some people love their tube amps and peculiar speakers... -Bill www.uptownaudio.com Roanoke VA (540) 343-1250 I'm all for acoustic measurements but to measure the effect of a cable, for example, there is no need to do so. If the signal reaching the speaker terminals hasn't changed then the output of the speaker cannot have changed. Occasionally I have also seen some pretty grim errors people have made in interpreting acoustical measurements in a room. For example it's pretty easy to break-down the test set-up (or to accidentally move the microphone or to fail to record levels) and then not duplicate the measurement procedure precisely and then draw bad conclusions. For example moving the microphone an inch can "change" a single measurement trace (so can your furnace turning on; traffic, etc) and make interpretation difficult. IMO if one can measure the item being tested at its output the data is as good as it can be. Of course, room acoustics and loudspeakers have to be evaluated with acoustical measurements but upstream components need not necessarily be done that way. "Ban" wrote in message ... Buster Mudd wrote: Before & After "tweaks" would be to measure the acoustic output of the complete sound system in the room. It does no good (other than to assure some smug self-congratulatory backpatting amongst the naysayers) to measure the electrical signal at the output of a $200 interconnect cable & show that it is identical to the electrical output of a $4 interconnect cable; the tweakophile who claims he heard a difference heard it connected to the rest of his audio system in his listening room through his ears, *not* through some direct electrical connection to the cable. Perhaps that $200 cable interacts bizarrely with the rest of his components, causing them to perform differently? If so, one would be hard pressed to argue that difference is not a measurable difference. Time Domain Spectrometry and FFT can map some fairly refined acoustic phenomena, so why not measure the sum total net difference in acoustic output of a sound system, both Before & After the application of a "tweak" & compare the results? Buster, you are wrong here, if there is any measurable difference at the output of the system, it will already show up at the output of the interconnect. The whole system works at exactly the same operating point and the single components will multiply their transmission functions. It is like 6x5= 5x6= identical. So no matter where you tweak, the difference will be there in the chain after the tweaked component and will go on being there exactly alike (as long as the system is linear) down the chain until the output. If you have applied several different tweaks, the final output will be exactly the product of each individual one and will be measurable after each changed component. Your argumentation is not valid, it is governed by your belief and utterly unscientific. -- ciao Ban Bordighera, Italy |
#50
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From: chung
Date: 6/18/2004 10:48 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: S888Wheel wrote: From: chung Date: 6/17/2004 3:29 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: S888Wheel wrote: And, too, a measurable difference is not necessarily audible. Never said it was. However if there is no measurable differences between two signals then there is nothing to discuss. They will make the same sound with the same associated equipment. The problem, of course, is that usually there is a measureable difference between two components, since our measuring instruments are so sensitive. It is not a problem for the instances in which there is no measurable differrence. My point is that there are very few instances where there is no measureable difference, because of the sensitivity of our test instruments. Care to provide examples where differences are not measureable? Do you think green pens create a measurable difference in the output of a CD player? Do you think anything Peter Belt ever invented created a measurable difference in any audio signal? One saves themselves the rigor of doing any further testing. So it still makes sense to start there. Only in principle. Not in practice. Fine. If you want to do elaborate DBTs for audible differences with and without green pen and Peter Belt tweaks knock yourself out. I still think a simpler solution is to measure the effect those products have on the signal to see if there is any reason to go forward with any further investigation. Your time your dime. Take two cables of the same make, one 3 ft long and one 3.1 ft long. There is a measureable difference. Heck, the lengths are clearly different. And we can certainly resolve the 0.1 nanosecond or so in delay. A delay is not inherently a difference in the signal. Why not? Explained further down in my post. What about a difference in phase shift? That's different. What about the 0.001dB in level due to the difference in resistance? That is different as well. How about the differences in resistance, capacitance and inductance? All different than a simple time delay. Heck you can measure differnt components days apart and there is a substantial delay but the signal is what it is each time. No, the analogy is incorrect. No it's not. One could measure those two cables at any time, at any place, with any set of accurate instruments and get the same difference in measurements. These differences are repeatable, and objective. That's fine, but if the only difference is the time delay than it is not a difference in signal content. It would take an extreme subjectivist, however, to claim that there is a sonic difference between those two. It would take a mistake in one's impression to say there is an audible difference if the only measurable difference is a nano second delay. There, you are beginning to make the point for me. You are providing a juegment call that a nanosec. delay does not cause an *audible* difference. Just like I may say that a difference in level of 0.1 dB is not an audible difference, but would everyone agree? No. Everyone rarely agrees on anything in audio. Of course, I agree that that delay is not audible, but nonetheless there is a *measureable* difference. The difficulty is in agreeing what is an inaudible but measureable difference. As I have said so many times now. I suggested that one *start* with checking for measurable differences. If none exist then there is no need to go further. I *never* said that any measurable difference is proof of an audible difference. It is proof at best of a *possibility* of an audible difference. A possibility that may need further investigation. Another example. Two preamps of the same make, model and specs. One has an output impedance of 200 ohms. The other 202 ohms. Clearly there is a measureable difference. Is it audible? Even if the comparisons are supposed to be syncronized. If they are not syncronized there is no measurable difference is there since such delays are irrelevent to the content of the signal. You are making a judgment call on what constitiutes an audible difference. By the way, that is the kind of calls that a lot of the more scientific-minded have tried to make (like one can't tell differences in level finer than 0.1dB, or one can't hear above 20 KHz), and a lot of so-called golden-ear audiphiles do not agree with. The crux of the problem is in the disagreement on what differences are detectible via listening only. Past research indicates that level differences of less than 0.3 dB over the audio band are not detectible by listeners. Let's be generous and tighten that to 0.2 dB. If we would agree that this is the threshold of audibility, then we can prove fairly easily that 99% of the cables and interconnects do sound the same. I said never said measurable differences were the end, only the start. If there is no measurable difference it is the start and end. In some cases some time and effort can be saved. Very, very few cases. It's better to go straight to controlled listening tests, IMO. Fine. Have fun with the Peter Belt tweaks. They'll waste about a week of your time though. |
#51
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#52
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chung wrote:
Steven Sullivan wrote: chung wrote: S888Wheel wrote: From: chung Date: 6/17/2004 3:29 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: S888Wheel wrote: And, too, a measurable difference is not necessarily audible. Never said it was. However if there is no measurable differences between two signals then there is nothing to discuss. They will make the same sound with the same associated equipment. The problem, of course, is that usually there is a measureable difference between two components, since our measuring instruments are so sensitive. It is not a problem for the instances in which there is no measurable differrence. My point is that there are very few instances where there is no measureable difference, because of the sensitivity of our test instruments. Care to provide examples where differences are not measureable? I would offer as an example bit-identity of two .wav files....which has not prevented listeners from claiming that they still sound different. In fact, what has happened in that case is lots of time spent trying to find a *differnt* measurement to validate the supposed difference (with 'jitter' usually named, but AFAIK never proved to be, the culprit). Yes, this is one of the few cases where you can measure no difference, but that's between 2 CD's and probably not what audiophiles were thinking of measuring. Audiophiles have played a significant part in driving the whole 'bit identical CDs sound different' goose chase. As a result we have pseudoscientific websites such as: http://www.altmann.haan.de/jitter/en...ngc_navfr.html where, after pages of technical discussion of jitter, interlaced with qyestionable claims of audibility, we are presented with evidence.... from sighted comparison. -- -S. Why don't you just admit that you hate music and leave people alone. -- spiffy |
#53
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Uptown Audio wrote:
If what you say is true, then who is to say that because you could measure a difference that the difference is audible. It is much easier to just do both at the same time and at the same place. If it registers on the screen and you hear it, then you have your proof. Of course you have evidence of an effect with the measurement, but to really sell the idea of how effective it is, you need to hear it and to measure it in the room. I agree I don't think setting-up a system is all about collecting data, but in getting it to sound right. That may not necessarily make it measure as you would guess or hope. If all we had to do was measure at the source, there would be no need to listen to music, we could just all take your word that it sounds good? Boom boxes all around anyone? A boom-box can be already identified by the impedance plot because it has a high Q-factor in the resonance point and/or bad damping, which shows up and is easily identifyable without even hearing it. But just this is the worst example you chose to make your point. I would rather mention distortion measurements, pulse response measurements or bumps in the frequency response. Here even big differences might not be audible. At the low end we can reliably differentiate between Q= 0.7 or 0.8, a very slight change actually. Anyone correct me please if I'm wrong, couldn't find data about this in the net. Another problem with measuring in general and it really does not matter where, is having the appropriate gear and settings as well as knowing what to measure. I encourage every audio enthusiast to start going this way, it incredibly enhances the listening experience when you have a scientific understanding which you gain by measuring. Room acoustics is a complicated but rewarding subject to study and with todays possibilities of the net you do not need to go to an expensive university but can do it at home (or work). Actually I try with my 2cents contributions here to influence my fellow music-lovers start experimenting themselves instead of believing doubtful "misinformation" by mags. Better to spend the money you pay for high-end mags to get a decent measurement system(clio-lite for example) and some good books. -- ciao Ban Bordighera, Italy |
#54
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On 6/19/04 2:58 AM, in article euRAc.66191$eu.32407@attbi_s02, "Uptown
Audio" wrote: He read on the net that Yamaha made a great integrated amp and he bought one. He hooks it up to his system, the only thing that he has changed, and he hates it. No bass, distorted high frequencies or noise or something that bothers him in that range and of course, a huge disappointment after all the "hype". This is the basic issue I have with people who make these claims with "challenges" and so on. It might verify a rather narrow claim, but be of little use, and some detriment, to a consumer. I have found that most reviews help narrow the field - but a good HiFi dealer will be able to give you a system you like with components you hadn't really considered, sometimes. Should I suggest that he just measure it and shut-up with his belly-aching as there is nothing wrong with that fine amp, but it that it is all in his head? The group here, at least half of them, you give that advise, I am sure. |
#56
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Dick Pierce wrote:
Despite all the arguments for and against tweaks and High resolution format, we are yet to see any one audio engineer who could throw a challenge to whoever claim that their product improve sound. In the name of science, has any of audio engineering society hauled up people who sell Racing Diamond cones or green pen or snake oil? for misleading the public? Why is it the job of science to disprove the outrageous claims and technichal bunkum of a buch of johoshes from a backwater industry? EVERYWHERE else in engineering and science, the obligation of proof is on those making the claims to begin with, NOT on everyone else to prove those claims wrong. Why are these people in the high-end audio business getting off the hook? WHat did they do to deserve release from their obligation? Why are THEY so privileged? The fact is that the high-end audio biz is DECADES behind the leading edge of technology. It hasn't got the background and knowledge of human audio perception that was studied back in the 1930's, it "discovered problems" that were described in the definitive peer- reviewed technical literature decades earlier, it promotes incompetent and defective designs. "We" worry about jitter, because these idiots TOLD "us" to worry about it. Because they haven't a clue what its all about. They sent "us" out on a wild goose chanse, and generated whole generations of expensive products, many of which made the problem WORSE, and got praise for their amazing "transparency." Dick Pierce Well said Dick, this is really a point why serious engineers avoid audio, because collegues laugh about it and consider it childish. This way a lot of capable personalities rather concentrate on Radar/Sonar weapon or "defense" industry which is considered decent and thus get lost for audio. And we can see here too, the educated and professional contributers are rather belonging to the objective wing, and their arguments hold so much stronger that this can "undo" a bit of stupid mags influence. And the subjectivists do not even perceive their flaws in thinking but rather believe in hallucinations and attribute it to their superiour golden ears. It is a bit like the "esoteric" business. Placing some shakti stones, magnets, crystals or other magic objects at certain strategic points will neither improve your health nor sound. It might be helping with health when we have a psychosomatic illness, but audio is not imaginary in the first place and there it is useless. I believe most of these preconceptions still come from the analog aera, where turntables were so delicate that vibration isolation or using another cable really could make a big difference, but alas that time is more than 20years past. Lets be a bit more modern and realistic. -- ciao Ban Bordighera, Italy |
#57
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OK, let's summarize what's been discussed so far:-
1.Jitter was an old issue and was addressed a long time ago. In fact, my previous post I did mention that Meridian addressed it in 1981, (message was decline by moderator due to technical reason) 2. IF today's jitter measurement in CD Player is low enough, can I say Superclock and XOclock be deemed as redundant. 3. I refer to High Sampling topic, can I say the 88khz sampling is good enough. So can I safely say that today's CD Players meet all the requirements. And if there's going to be any improvement where should I look for? Rgds. |
#58
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Care to provide examples where differences are not measureable?
When you don't know what to measure - or are measuring the wrong things. |
#59
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On 6/19/04 2:57 AM, in article OtRAc.114996$3x.61100@attbi_s54, "chung"
wrote: If not for people like you guys, I would have burned a big hole in my pocket when I was shopping for my first SACD. Bought it and it outperformed my high End CD transport and DAC. Which one did you buy - and which one did you switch from? I am contemplating purchase of one, but my humble NAD C541i seems to be better than the similarly priced Sony 222ES with a SACD disk - which pretty much is as much as I am willing to spend at this time. But I expect you guys to be bold. For an example , name the manufacturer who backed out . I will write to them and ask them what they got to hide. I have done that to two manufacturers and got the answers I was looking for after complaints to various consumer groups nad government organ. (I am not naming them here and atleast one of them is here, because it would do them injustice due to different issues involved.) For starters, ask any cable manufacturer who states that cables need break-in, or that there is directivity to it (other than the extra grounding lead on some interconnect cables) to provide measurements to back up those claims. I think in many cases it is understood that it is the end user that is broken in rather than the cables. I am not sure where this idea came from - though when making coaxial cables to avoid teflon expansion the cable is cut to length, and heat cycled several times, then the ends soldered on - since otherwise you risk the teflon pushing the connector. I cannot imagine that speaker cable or other wire would break in that way, though? |
#60
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Bromo wrote:
On 6/18/04 9:42 PM, in article , "chung" wrote: I would offer as an example bit-identity of two .wav files....which has not prevented listeners from claiming that they still sound different. In fact, what has happened in that case is lots of time spent trying to find a *differnt* measurement to validate the supposed difference (with 'jitter' usually named, but AFAIK never proved to be, the culprit). Yes, this is one of the few cases where you can measure no difference, but that's between 2 CD's and probably not what audiophiles were thinking of measuring. And there is speculation that bit-identical CD's may still sound different due to jitter. If there is one transport that produces high jitter and one that produces low jitter - they will sound different. But it is measurable. No, I was talking about the same CD player/transport/DAC. |
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Uptown Audio wrote:
If what you say is true, then who is to say that because you could measure a difference that the difference is audible. It is much easier to just do both at the same time and at the same place. If it registers on the screen and you hear it, then you have your proof. You mean, if you hear it under blind conditions. Evidence on the screen + sighted claim of audibility doesn't add up to proof. In factm evidence on the screen *followed by* a sighted comparison would be very prone to generate a report of audible difference, regardless of the actual audibility. If there is evidence ont he scren, and Of course you have evidence of an effect with the measurement, but to really sell the idea of how effective it is, you need to hear it and to measure it in the room. I don't think setting-up a system is all about collecting data, but in getting it to sound right. That may not necessarily make it measure as you would guess or hope. If all we had to do was measure at the source, there would be no need to listen to music, we could just all take your word that it sounds good? Boom boxes all around anyone? Another problem with measuring in general and it really does not matter where, is having the appropriate gear and settings as well as knowing what to measure. Evaluating a cable can be done in free space and with test gear only, no stereo is required. That is not true with acoustics and with mechanical dampening or coupling of the equipment. Sure you could measure output after the device that was modified, but unless it was a board level component that was changed, finding the right thing to measure the right way can be difficult {and in my opinion a total bore and waste of time (sort of like this thread...)}. It boils down to what you can hear and you are, in the end, still better off just listening. If you can't trust your ears, just get a boom box. You only have to satisfy yourself. You are gonna love this one: I had a fellow come in the other day who is looking to find a suitable amplifier to replace his old and unreliable Pioneer receiver. He read on the net that Yamaha made a great integrated amp and he bought one. He hooks it up to his system, the only thing that he has changed, and he hates it. No bass, distorted high frequencies or noise or something that bothers him in that range and of course, a huge disappointment after all the "hype". Should I suggest that he just measure it and shut-up with his belly-aching as there is nothing wrong with that fine amp, but it that it is all in his head? YOu might siggest that he check his set-up (you can't just 'swap in' a modern HT receiver out of the box -- there are numerous settings to make.) It's impossible for a properly workign Yamaha to inherently produce 'no bass' . You might also suggest he compare amps under bias-controlled conditions., *especially* if he reports vast differences between them. |
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Wow, they got total satisfaction policy, so I might give it a try. Not many
guys do that. "Steven Sullivan" wrote in message ... chung wrote: Audiophiles have played a significant part in driving the whole 'bit identical CDs sound different' goose chase. As a result we have pseudoscientific websites such as: http://www.altmann.haan.de/jitter/en...ngc_navfr.html where, after pages of technical discussion of jitter, interlaced with qyestionable claims of audibility, we are presented with evidence.... from sighted comparison. -- -S. Why don't you just admit that you hate music and leave people alone. -- spiffy |
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Chelvam wrote:
OK, let's summarize what's been discussed so far:- 1.Jitter was an old issue and was addressed a long time ago. In fact, my previous post I did mention that Meridian addressed it in 1981, (message was decline by moderator due to technical reason) The most definitive study of jitter to day was actually summarized in a paper by two engineers, Benjamin and Gannon, from Dolby Labs in the late '90's. This is available from AES as reprint 4826. What they found is that jitter has to be much higher than is commonly found on CD players for it to be audible. 2. IF today's jitter measurement in CD Player is low enough, can I say Superclock and XOclock be deemed as redundant. Yes. 3. I refer to High Sampling topic, can I say the 88khz sampling is good enough. Yes. So can I safely say that today's CD Players meet all the requirements. And if there's going to be any improvement where should I look for? Speakers. Or get great CD's. Rgds. |
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chung wrote:
Chelvam wrote: So can I safely say that today's CD Players meet all the requirements. And if there's going to be any improvement where should I look for? Speakers. Or get great CD's. Or, if that seems too simple, take Ban's suggestion and learn a little about acoustics, then work on optimal speaker placement and room treatments. This can be a long-term preoccupation, and doesn't even require you to churn through expensive equipment that you have to resell for 50 cents on the dollar. bob __________________________________________________ _______________ FREE pop-up blocking with the new MSN Toolbar – get it now! http://toolbar.msn.click-url.com/go/...ave/direct/01/ |
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"Bromo" wrote in message
news:7OZAc.141242$Ly.36881@attbi_s01... Which one did you buy - and which one did you switch from? I am contemplating purchase of one, but my humble NAD C541i seems to be better than the similarly priced Sony 222ES with a SACD disk - which pretty much is as much as I am willing to spend at this time. Sony 222ES is a fine player. Though you will find it a bit bright and screeching. Instead of buying a new player try mod. For about $300, you can mod the clock, caps and the output stage. That will tame the unit a bit. Mine a QS series DVPNS915v about $400 and a mod almost that amount replace Theta DAC and transport. Still keeping the DAC, Transport sold. To do DBT to amuse myself. I guess I just walked right into the firing squad. |
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Bromo wrote:
Care to provide examples where differences are not measureable? When you don't know what to measure - or are measuring the wrong things. And I predicted someone would retort in this fashion, several days ago. Thanks for proving me right. -- -S. Why don't you just admit that you hate music and leave people alone. -- spiffy |
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Bromo wrote:
On 6/19/04 2:57 AM, in article OtRAc.114996$3x.61100@attbi_s54, "chung" wrote: If not for people like you guys, I would have burned a big hole in my pocket when I was shopping for my first SACD. Bought it and it outperformed my high End CD transport and DAC. Which one did you buy - and which one did you switch from? I am contemplating purchase of one, but my humble NAD C541i seems to be better than the similarly priced Sony 222ES with a SACD disk - which pretty much is as much as I am willing to spend at this time. But I expect you guys to be bold. For an example , name the manufacturer who backed out . I will write to them and ask them what they got to hide. I have done that to two manufacturers and got the answers I was looking for after complaints to various consumer groups nad government organ. (I am not naming them here and atleast one of them is here, because it would do them injustice due to different issues involved.) For starters, ask any cable manufacturer who states that cables need break-in, or that there is directivity to it (other than the extra grounding lead on some interconnect cables) to provide measurements to back up those claims. I think in many cases it is understood that it is the end user that is broken in rather than the cables. Have you been to the Audio Asylum cable forum? I am not sure where this idea came from - though when making coaxial cables to avoid teflon expansion the cable is cut to length, and heat cycled several times, then the ends soldered on - since otherwise you risk the teflon pushing the connector. I cannot imagine that speaker cable or other wire would break in that way, though? This idea came from boutique cable companies and golden-eared audiophiles. Go to www.audioquest.com., click "Cable Theory", and read page 5. Among the many gems of knowledge provided the "Please be patient when first listening to any superior product." "Several weeks of disuse will return a cable to nearly its original state." "Since human perception is more aware of the existence of a distortion than the quantity, the better the cable, the worse in some ways it will sound when new, because the anemic forced two-dimensional effect reulting from being new will not be ameliorated by other gentler distortions." "While cable directionality is not fully understood, it is clear that the molecular structure of drawn metal is not symmetrical, providing a physical explanation for the existence of directionality." |
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S888Wheel wrote:
From: chung Date: 6/18/2004 10:48 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: S888Wheel wrote: From: chung Date: 6/17/2004 3:29 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: S888Wheel wrote: And, too, a measurable difference is not necessarily audible. Never said it was. However if there is no measurable differences between two signals then there is nothing to discuss. They will make the same sound with the same associated equipment. The problem, of course, is that usually there is a measureable difference between two components, since our measuring instruments are so sensitive. It is not a problem for the instances in which there is no measurable differrence. My point is that there are very few instances where there is no measureable difference, because of the sensitivity of our test instruments. Care to provide examples where differences are not measureable? Do you think green pens create a measurable difference in the output of a CD player? Fine, I agree that green pen effects are not mesaureable. Do you think anything Peter Belt ever invented created a measurable difference in any audio signal? Don't know about his tweaks. Have not heard of them until now. One saves themselves the rigor of doing any further testing. So it still makes sense to start there. Only in principle. Not in practice. Fine. If you want to do elaborate DBTs for audible differences with and without green pen and Peter Belt tweaks knock yourself out. I still think a simpler solution is to measure the effect those products have on the signal to see if there is any reason to go forward with any further investigation. Your time your dime. Now try to measure the difference between the output of a CD player, playing two CD's that are otherwise equal except for the green pen markings. You think that is easy to do? It seems like you under-estimate the difficulty in making accurate technical measurements. Take two cables of the same make, one 3 ft long and one 3.1 ft long. There is a measureable difference. Heck, the lengths are clearly different. And we can certainly resolve the 0.1 nanosecond or so in delay. A delay is not inherently a difference in the signal. Why not? Explained further down in my post. What about a difference in phase shift? That's different. Uh, a delay results in a phase shift. There is a difference in phase shift between those cables. What about the 0.001dB in level due to the difference in resistance? That is different as well. That could easily be due to the one inch difference in cable. How about the differences in resistance, capacitance and inductance? All different than a simple time delay. But all caused by a one inch difference in cable. You see my point? Heck you can measure differnt components days apart and there is a substantial delay but the signal is what it is each time. No, the analogy is incorrect. No it's not. One could measure those two cables at any time, at any place, with any set of accurate instruments and get the same difference in measurements. These differences are repeatable, and objective. That's fine, but if the only difference is the time delay than it is not a difference in signal content. Difference in time delay = difference in phase shift= measureable difference. It would take an extreme subjectivist, however, to claim that there is a sonic difference between those two. It would take a mistake in one's impression to say there is an audible difference if the only measurable difference is a nano second delay. There, you are beginning to make the point for me. You are providing a juegment call that a nanosec. delay does not cause an *audible* difference. Just like I may say that a difference in level of 0.1 dB is not an audible difference, but would everyone agree? No. Everyone rarely agrees on anything in audio. Obviously, and that was why I said finding a measureable difference does not mean much. And many tweaks, like changing resistors, capacitors, different cables, result in measureable differences. Of course, I agree that that delay is not audible, but nonetheless there is a *measureable* difference. The difficulty is in agreeing what is an inaudible but measureable difference. As I have said so many times now. I suggested that one *start* with checking for measurable differences. If none exist then there is no need to go further. I *never* said that any measurable difference is proof of an audible difference. It is proof at best of a *possibility* of an audible difference. A possibility that may need further investigation. Another example. Two preamps of the same make, model and specs. One has an output impedance of 200 ohms. The other 202 ohms. Clearly there is a measureable difference. Is it audible? Well? Even if the comparisons are supposed to be syncronized. If they are not syncronized there is no measurable difference is there since such delays are irrelevent to the content of the signal. You are making a judgment call on what constitiutes an audible difference. By the way, that is the kind of calls that a lot of the more scientific-minded have tried to make (like one can't tell differences in level finer than 0.1dB, or one can't hear above 20 KHz), and a lot of so-called golden-ear audiphiles do not agree with. The crux of the problem is in the disagreement on what differences are detectible via listening only. Past research indicates that level differences of less than 0.3 dB over the audio band are not detectible by listeners. Let's be generous and tighten that to 0.2 dB. If we would agree that this is the threshold of audibility, then we can prove fairly easily that 99% of the cables and interconnects do sound the same. I said never said measurable differences were the end, only the start. If there is no measurable difference it is the start and end. In some cases some time and effort can be saved. Very, very few cases. It's better to go straight to controlled listening tests, IMO. Fine. Have fun with the Peter Belt tweaks. They'll waste about a week of your time though. Actually I am not interested in personally measuring differences, or doing DBT's, when it comes to debunk myths, if that has not been obvious in my posts. I firmly believe that the proponents of those tweaks should provide proof. But between making measaurements and doing DBT's, I believe the latter to be much more effective, since there is so much disagreement on what measureable differences mean. |
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Bromo wrote:
On 6/19/04 2:58 AM, in article euRAc.66191$eu.32407@attbi_s02, "Uptown Audio" wrote: He read on the net that Yamaha made a great integrated amp and he bought one. He hooks it up to his system, the only thing that he has changed, and he hates it. No bass, distorted high frequencies or noise or something that bothers him in that range and of course, a huge disappointment after all the "hype". This is the basic issue I have with people who make these claims with "challenges" and so on. It might verify a rather narrow claim, but be of little use, and some detriment, to a consumer. The basic issue is that sighted listening is prone to bias. I have found that most reviews help narrow the field - but a good HiFi dealer will be able to give you a system you like with components you hadn't really considered, sometimes. Or at least, ones he can make a good profit on. Should I suggest that he just measure it and shut-up with his belly-aching as there is nothing wrong with that fine amp, but it that it is all in his head? The group here, at least half of them, you give that advise, I am sure. Apparently both of you fail, even after all this time here, to realize the distinction between objective measurements, and bias-controlled *listening* as two sorts of evidence for difference. Perhaps this explains why you repeatedly haul out this 'just measure it' straww man. Btw, a *gross* lack of bass, such as described would *have to* show up in both sorts of evidence, if real. And if it doesn't, what would be *your* conclusions? -- -S. Why don't you just admit that you hate music and leave people alone. -- spiffy |
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"Chelvam" wrote in
news:rI_Ac.76602$0y.9306@attbi_s03: Wow, they got total satisfaction policy, so I might give it a try. Not many guys do that. Satisfaction guarantees are not proof of anything. Here is a quote from that particular website. "There are several jitter attenuation or reclocking products on the market. All of these products suffer from the fact, that you need a cable, in order to connect to the digital receiver (f.e. DA converter). This will introduce new jitter, the cleaned signal will be contaminated again, before it reaches the receiving device." How is jitter reintroduced with a short cable yet digitized telephone signals travel over miles of copper without impact? IOW, that site could be deconstructed quite easily, but isn't worth the time, bandwidth, nor the effort. r -- Nothing beats the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with DLT tapes. |
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"Go to www.audioquest.com., click "Cable Theory", and read
page 5. Among the many gems of knowledge provided the snip "Since human perception is more aware of the existence of a distortion than the quantity, the better the cable, the worse in some ways it will sound when new, because the anemic forced two-dimensional effect reulting from being new will not be ameliorated by other gentler distortions." "While cable directionality is not fully understood, it is clear that the molecular structure of drawn metal is not symmetrical, providing a physical explanation for the existence of directionality."" A few years ago in speaker coil mag., belden wire reported a test where wire whose directiondrawn was known to see if people could identify it when two samples of the same wire were was used and one was reversed, blinding was not required because there was no external sign of "direction". No difference could be detected. |
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Michael McKelvy wrote:
"Sean Fulop" wrote in message ... And I repeat, we cannot be sure that everything can be measured. Then you can't be sure it can't be either. Everything I've seen on the subject says that we have the ability to measure everything hearable. Unless youhave some proof that the right things or everything isn't being measured, you're just making a blank assertion. Yes, but it's an assertion taken for granted by scientists in every field. It is very uncommon for any scientist to claim "we know everything about subject X now, finally," or something unprovable like "we can ascribe a measurable property to every difference we can hear." There are numerous effects of audio on the person that may not be captured by current theories about signals and their nature. Obviously any two signals that sound different will actually be different to some degree, but simply showing that two signals are different is not the same as "measurement" of the difference. In science it is common to err on the side of caution, to always presume there may be more to any subject or field of inquiry, stuff that remains undiscovered. I agree with you that ABX can be useful, but since it is known that the results can be affected by methodology, once again one can never be certain that the "perfect" ABX-style methodology has been developed. These tests were improved steadily over many decades, which yielded increasing sensitivity to audible differences that could be detected by the tests. We cannot be sure we now have the perfect audibility tests for all domains of sonic difference. -Sean |
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chung wrote:
Bromo wrote: On 6/18/04 9:42 PM, in article , "chung" wrote: I would offer as an example bit-identity of two .wav files....which has not prevented listeners from claiming that they still sound different. In fact, what has happened in that case is lots of time spent trying to find a *differnt* measurement to validate the supposed difference (with 'jitter' usually named, but AFAIK never proved to be, the culprit). Yes, this is one of the few cases where you can measure no difference, but that's between 2 CD's and probably not what audiophiles were thinking of measuring. And there is speculation that bit-identical CD's may still sound different due to jitter. If there is one transport that produces high jitter and one that produces low jitter - they will sound different. But it is measurable. No, I was talking about the same CD player/transport/DAC. If I understand correclty, the hypothesis inherent CD jitter (versus playback path jitter), is that two bit-identical CDs can be different because one was manufactured with more jitter than the other. If so, one thing I'm not clear on is, why doesn't such jitter show up in comparison of the 'bits'? -- -S. Why don't you just admit that you hate music and leave people alone. -- spiffy |
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IF you got through other posts here, especailly the one on Vintage DAC-
jitter is a higher in separate DAC. ___ "Rich.Andrews" wrote in message news ![]() How is jitter reintroduced with a short cable yet digitized telephone signals travel over miles of copper without impact? IOW, that site could be deconstructed quite easily, but isn't worth the time, bandwidth, nor the effort. r -- Nothing beats the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with DLT tapes. |
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On 6/19/04 11:47 PM, in article aN7Bc.143806$Ly.57935@attbi_s01, "S888Wheel"
wrote: From: Steven Sullivan Date: 6/19/2004 1:50 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: Bromo wrote: Care to provide examples where differences are not measureable? When you don't know what to measure - or are measuring the wrong things. And I predicted someone would retort in this fashion, several days ago. Thanks for proving me right. Are you suggesting we should not worry about people measuring everything that matters or failing to measure everything that matters? You should be a bit worried that if you set up a test that shows something that observation shows otherwise - rather than assume that people are deluding themselves (which may be entertaining and somewhat possible in some cases) - you should entertain the notion that the test itself may not be measuring the right things. For instance - there is a lot of faith (yes FAITH) placed in ABX tests. What are you measuring in an ABX test, really? It is repeatable, but is it measuring the right things in the right method? These are the things that should be bothering a true scientist. It is a bit like measuring the speed of gravity and saying that the people who observe a feather falling slower than a bowling ball are deluding themselves. Perhaps you aren't measuring the right things ..... |
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chung wrote:
Bromo wrote: On 6/19/04 2:57 AM, in article OtRAc.114996$3x.61100@attbi_s54, "chung" wrote: If not for people like you guys, I would have burned a big hole in my pocket when I was shopping for my first SACD. Bought it and it outperformed my high End CD transport and DAC. Which one did you buy - and which one did you switch from? I am contemplating purchase of one, but my humble NAD C541i seems to be better than the similarly priced Sony 222ES with a SACD disk - which pretty much is as much as I am willing to spend at this time. But I expect you guys to be bold. For an example , name the manufacturer who backed out . I will write to them and ask them what they got to hide. I have done that to two manufacturers and got the answers I was looking for after complaints to various consumer groups nad government organ. (I am not naming them here and atleast one of them is here, because it would do them injustice due to different issues involved.) For starters, ask any cable manufacturer who states that cables need break-in, or that there is directivity to it (other than the extra grounding lead on some interconnect cables) to provide measurements to back up those claims. I think in many cases it is understood that it is the end user that is broken in rather than the cables. Have you been to the Audio Asylum cable forum? Are almost any audio magazine article/review that mentions cable break-in? "Please be patient when first listening to any superior product." "Several weeks of disuse will return a cable to nearly its original state." "Since human perception is more aware of the existence of a distortion than the quantity, the better the cable, the worse in some ways it will sound when new, because the anemic forced two-dimensional effect reulting from being new will not be ameliorated by other gentler distortions." "While cable directionality is not fully understood, it is clear that the molecular structure of drawn metal is not symmetrical, providing a physical explanation for the existence of directionality." People wonder why engineers and scientists don't 'rise up' to counter the ludicrous belief systems of audiophilia. I suspect it's because they're laughing too hard. -- -S. Why don't you just admit that you hate music and leave people alone. -- spiffy |
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Assuming the Benchmark company's claims about jitter are all bunk, it would
be interesting to challenge them to a DBT of their DAC1. I f I recall correctly a recent posting by Stewart Pinkerton, who seems to be as objective as they come had good things to say about it. Their measurements are at: http://www.benchmarkmedia.com/appnot...yultralock.asp "We" worry about jitter, because these idiots TOLD "us" to worry about it. Because they haven't a clue what its all about. They sent "us" out on a wild goose chanse, and generated whole generations of expensive products, many of which made the problem WORSE, and got praise for their amazing "transparency." +---------------------------------------+ | Dick Pierce | | Professional Audio Development | | (1) 781/826-4953 Voice and FAX | | | +---------------------------------------+ |
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