I don't believe cables make a difference, any input?

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No audiophile ever asked you for proof so why do you?

Maybe because I don't make unsupported extraordinary claims? When I do, I will not at all resent the call for evidence- that's integral to intellectual honesty.

Sure, without a solid shred of evidence and besides some pointers I past on many years ago, nothing tangible there for those who don't want to accept that there's at least a possibility of audibility there.

There's nothing tangible there even for those of us who would accept the possibility. Zero. Zip. Nada. Only the same "evidence" that exists for the sonic efficacy of freezing one's photograph.
 
Hi,

Catch22 warning.

My point exactly.
Audibility simply isn't tangible and therefore a figment of the mind, a belief, a religion. I'd call it a convcition of the moment.

Which brings me back to the much debated point: how do I convince you or anyone else of the fact that what I hear is not necessarily what you hear?

To me a single DBT test still doesn't prove a thing. As a matter of "opinion" I'm pretty sure it takes at least a dozen of DBTs carried out by thousand of people to make it at the very least plausible to some.

Still, worldwide, how large do you estimate the number of audiophiles/ music lovers etc. that have deluded themselves time and time again thinking that cable A sounds different from cable B?
Let's now eliminate the obvious and assume what they were listening to were identical cables as far as L, C and R go?

O.K. so the number is decreasing but I still imagine thousands if not millions of people, don't you?

Let's now narrow it down once more, how many put themselves to the test and actually verified and double checked they just weren't imagining things?

A few hundred thousand left worldwide? Maybe.

Yep, must be mass dillusion.

Science is like the foundation of the house you want to build, if you don't build upon it that foundation serves no purpose.🙂

No offense, just observing. 😉

Kind regards,

Frank
 
Markus, in 19994, me, Bernd Theis and Malkolm Hawsksford build a room that had sufficient depression of early reflexion, horizontally and vertically. Bernd was working on an "artificial listener" at that time. We wanted to find out how the ear decodes 3 dimensional space. It led to a paper about how to setup speakers in a home environment
published by the AES. I think the setup method i developed solved the problem suffiently well. It is posible to listen at home to the sound that was recorded in the studio or in a life environment.
 
To me a single DBT test still doesn't prove a thing.

But it does, assuming falsification of the null hypothesis. Just one valid, controlled test. 30+ years of these remarkable claims and it still hasn't happened. Given that track record of zero, coupled with claims that contradict well-established physics and engineering, you have to understand that there's going to be some cynicism...
 
However, even if you were to do what you just said the results will measure very differently. Even if it's hard for some people to understand the relation between the measurements and the results 2 things that sound different will measure different, period. So what about something that doesn't measure different? If speaker cables produce no measurable differences in the sound produced by the speakers then there is no difference in the sound produced. I'll put money down that there isn't a pair of systems out there that can be readily identified from one another in blind tests but measure identically.

Hello Kareface

Why are you assuming there will be large differences?? They probably will measure differently depending on what you look at but it may not be obvious what the important differences are in the measurements with respect to the audible differences between the speakers. Understanding the relationship between what we hear with what we measure in the key to any meanigful improvement in the current state of affairs.

Earl did a great job by pointing out that the room has an influence of how spacious a speaker will sound and that it's a complex issue. We can all hear soundstage and depth. I know it's an illusion but some speakers do it better than others. Because of the complexity and the interaction with the room it's not that easy to define by using a simple speaker measurement set.

So what about something that doesn't measure different?

Depends on the measurement. If you mean cables well I worry about speaker and room primarilly. That's where I put my emphasis.

Rob🙂
 
No, i whould not mind. What makes me sad is that you present me Olives well known work. All speakers that have a linear on axis frequency response and semi decent radiation pattern sound the same. That is not research. That is advertising in disguise funded by the second biggest manufaturer of home entertainment equipment.

I'm close to tears. What do you do for a living? 🙂

Best, Markus

P.S. You have a PM.
 
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