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#1
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I've often thought that if we eliminated (primarily because they've become
too predictable and boring) the discussions that invariably devolve into DBT debates, ie. cables, equipment "burn-in", amplifiers, green pens, etc., there would be precious few threads worth following. According to the regular DBT proponents, most (if not all) CD players, cables (of all kind) and amplifiers are indistinguishable one from another, so if you heard a difference and want to discuss it, you first have to validate your observation via some form of DBT. This yields two possible responses to a new equipment related thread. One is that since very few (if any) posters bother to set up a DBT for product evaluation, there is no point of discussion, since your new "x" defacto, sounds the same as your old "x" because you can't prove otherwise. The second possible response is that based on the DBTs that have been done, your old "x" must sound the same as your new one because it's been established that all "x's" are indistinguishable. The third possibility which used to occupy most of this group was the discussion about what the equipment itself sounded like, but those conversations rarely happen anymore, either because such differences no longer exist, or because the DBT camp redirects them as DBT discussions (perhaps because those differences no longer exist.) Either way, meaningful discussion over audio equipment is becoming increasingly rare. My initial thinking (and boredom) was that since current generation CD players sound virtually identical, "properly engineered" amplifiers and pre-amplifiers sound virtually identical, and cables make no difference; this NG, indeed all audio discussions should be limited to speaker discussions. After all, they're all different sounding and no one pair is perfect and while some may argue, we really have progressed to the point where we've achieved near perfection upstream. So the discussions that used to be very important back when amplification wasn't quite as mature of a technology as it is today, have simply lost their relevance. So that leaves us with a quandry. What do we who love music and the science/art of musical reproduction have to talk about? Surely there must be more than just speakers. Acoustic treatment, room setup and recordings anyone? I'd be very interested to hear thoughts from the group as to other possibilities, as it's clear that we're close to exhausting other equipment's potential for discussion. |
#2
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Bruce Abrams wrote in message news:9Ov7b.297825$cF.92706@rwcrnsc53...
So that leaves us with a quandry. What do we who love music and the science/art of musical reproduction have to talk about? Surely there must be more than just speakers. Acoustic treatment, room setup and recordings anyone? I'd be very interested to hear thoughts from the group as to other possibilities, as it's clear that we're close to exhausting other equipment's potential for discussion. If you take the topics of speakers, room setup, acoustic treatment and recordings, then there is no question (at least to me) that differences between well engineered amps, CD players and cables are insignificant in comparison. Analog falls somewhere in between, differences between cartridges, turntables and head amps being greater than those between CD players, amps & cables but still usually not as great as the differences room treatment & setup can make. I think the difference is how one experiences this hobby: do we listen to the music, or to the equipment? Obviously these are two ideal types and most of us are somewhere in between. Those in the former half are building up (and listening to) their music collections while those in the latter half are building up, tweaking (and listening to) their gear. We all do a little of both but the balance between the two varies widely from person to person. Many years ago I started in the 2nd camp but over time I've gradually shifted to the 1st camp. What happened was through time & experience listening to lots of different stuff, I built up a set of equipment that keeps me happy. So now the goal is to grow the music collection, tracking down good recordings of good performances. |
#3
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Bruce Abrams wrote in message news:9Ov7b.297825$cF.92706@rwcrnsc53...
I've often thought that if we eliminated (primarily because they've become too predictable and boring) the discussions that invariably devolve into DBT debates, ie. cables, equipment "burn-in", amplifiers, green pens, etc., there would be precious few threads worth following. According to the regular DBT proponents, most (if not all) CD players, cables (of all kind) and amplifiers are indistinguishable one from another, so if you heard a difference and want to discuss it, you first have to validate your observation via some form of DBT. This yields two possible responses to a new equipment related thread. One is that since very few (if any) posters bother to set up a DBT for product evaluation, there is no point of discussion, since your new "x" defacto, sounds the same as your old "x" because you can't prove otherwise. The second possible response is that based on the DBTs that have been done, your old "x" must sound the same as your new one because it's been established that all "x's" are indistinguishable. The third possibility which used to occupy most of this group was the discussion about what the equipment itself sounded like, but those conversations rarely happen anymore, either because such differences no longer exist, or because the DBT camp redirects them as DBT discussions (perhaps because those differences no longer exist.) Either way, meaningful discussion over audio equipment is becoming increasingly rare. My initial thinking (and boredom) was that since current generation CD players sound virtually identical, "properly engineered" amplifiers and pre-amplifiers sound virtually identical, and cables make no difference; this NG, indeed all audio discussions should be limited to speaker discussions. After all, they're all different sounding and no one pair is perfect and while some may argue, we really have progressed to the point where we've achieved near perfection upstream. So the discussions that used to be very important back when amplification wasn't quite as mature of a technology as it is today, have simply lost their relevance. So that leaves us with a quandry. What do we who love music and the science/art of musical reproduction have to talk about? Surely there must be more than just speakers. Acoustic treatment, room setup and recordings anyone? I'd be very interested to hear thoughts from the group as to other possibilities, as it's clear that we're close to exhausting other equipment's potential for discussion. I would think there is a lot to talk about. Let's start with the renaissance in digital room correction systems starting to hit the market from mass market producers i.e. Pioneer and now Yamaha. I would think people could talk at length at where this is headed, how it will affect the speaker industry etc. In the end, even if there was some minor difference in a cable that affected the sound, it is minor to some of the things in the works in the form of digital-unless of course you hate all things digital. |
#4
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Does anyone have any direct experience with either of the mentioned Yamaha
or Pioneer products, or any other similar products? "randyb" wrote in message ... Bruce Abrams wrote in message news:9Ov7b.297825$cF.92706@rwcrnsc53... I've often thought that if we eliminated (primarily because they've become too predictable and boring) the discussions that invariably devolve into DBT debates, ie. cables, equipment "burn-in", amplifiers, green pens, etc., there would be precious few threads worth following. According to the regular DBT proponents, most (if not all) CD players, cables (of all kind) and amplifiers are indistinguishable one from another, so if you heard a difference and want to discuss it, you first have to validate your observation via some form of DBT. This yields two possible responses to a new equipment related thread. One is that since very few (if any) posters bother to set up a DBT for product evaluation, there is no point of discussion, since your new "x" defacto, sounds the same as your old "x" because you can't prove otherwise. The second possible response is that based on the DBTs that have been done, your old "x" must sound the same as your new one because it's been established that all "x's" are indistinguishable. The third possibility which used to occupy most of this group was the discussion about what the equipment itself sounded like, but those conversations rarely happen anymore, either because such differences no longer exist, or because the DBT camp redirects them as DBT discussions (perhaps because those differences no longer exist.) Either way, meaningful discussion over audio equipment is becoming increasingly rare. My initial thinking (and boredom) was that since current generation CD players sound virtually identical, "properly engineered" amplifiers and pre-amplifiers sound virtually identical, and cables make no difference; this NG, indeed all audio discussions should be limited to speaker discussions. After all, they're all different sounding and no one pair is perfect and while some may argue, we really have progressed to the point where we've achieved near perfection upstream. So the discussions that used to be very important back when amplification wasn't quite as mature of a technology as it is today, have simply lost their relevance. So that leaves us with a quandry. What do we who love music and the science/art of musical reproduction have to talk about? Surely there must be more than just speakers. Acoustic treatment, room setup and recordings anyone? I'd be very interested to hear thoughts from the group as to other possibilities, as it's clear that we're close to exhausting other equipment's potential for discussion. I would think there is a lot to talk about. Let's start with the renaissance in digital room correction systems starting to hit the market from mass market producers i.e. Pioneer and now Yamaha. I would think people could talk at length at where this is headed, how it will affect the speaker industry etc. In the end, even if there was some minor difference in a cable that affected the sound, it is minor to some of the things in the works in the form of digital-unless of course you hate all things digital. |
#5
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Bruce Abrams wrote:
I've often thought that if we eliminated (primarily because they've become too predictable and boring) the discussions that invariably devolve into DBT debates, ie. cables, equipment "burn-in", amplifiers, green pens, etc., there would be precious few threads worth following. According to the regular DBT proponents, most (if not all) CD players, cables (of all kind) and amplifiers are indistinguishable one from another, so if you heard a difference and want to discuss it, you first have to validate your observation via some form of DBT. Nope, you don't 'have' to do even that. All you 'have' to do is acknowledge that you might be wrong, based on what is known about perceptual bias. (perhaps because those differences no longer exist.) Either way, meaningful discussion over audio equipment is becoming increasingly rare. Topics off the top of my head: Speakers. Cartridges. Room treatments. Acoustics. Features of digital players and the preamp/amp chain such as bass management and DSP. Recording. State of the hobby. Audiiophile culture. Audiophile magazines. Data compression codecs. And of course, reports on equipment that *do* involve some controls and measurements. -- -S. |
#6
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#7
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In article 9Ov7b.297825$cF.92706@rwcrnsc53,
Bruce Abrams writes: I've often thought that if we eliminated (primarily because they've become too predictable and boring) the discussions that invariably devolve into DBT debates, ie. cables, equipment "burn-in", amplifiers, green pens, etc., there would be precious few threads worth following. According to the regular DBT proponents, most (if not all) CD players, cables (of all kind) and amplifiers are indistinguishable one from another, so if you heard a difference and want to discuss it, you first have to validate your observation via some form of DBT. This yields two possible responses to a new equipment related thread. One is that since very few (if any) posters bother to set up a DBT for product evaluation, there is no point of discussion, since your new "x" defacto, sounds the same as your old "x" because you can't prove otherwise. The second possible response is that based on the DBTs that have been done, your old "x" must sound the same as your new one because it's been established that all "x's" are indistinguishable. The third possibility which used to occupy most of this group was the discussion about what the equipment itself sounded like, but those conversations rarely happen anymore, either because such differences no longer exist, or because the DBT camp redirects them as DBT discussions (perhaps because those differences no longer exist.) Either way, meaningful discussion over audio equipment is becoming increasingly rare. That may be what they want to do, but it is not what they are being allowed to do. We have an ongoing moratorium on allowing non-DBT discussions from being turned into DBT discussions. But few of those starting or joining in on non-DBT threads have been able to resist saying something along the lines of "but I don't need a DBT to tell the difference" and so open it up to the discussion of DBTs. They are the ones to blame, not the DBT crowd. So the moral of the story is to not mention DBTs in subjective threads or start threads about them if you don't want to hear about them. So far, very, very few have been able to do so. -- David Bath - RAHE Co-moderator |