#52733 - 05/03/05 05:33 PM
A challenge to the "golden ears"
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Gunslinger
Registered: 06/11/04
Posts: 23
Loc: Red Lion PA USA
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1. Take a 990 and any other processor of any manufacturer at any price. 2. Set them up to operate the same amplifier and speakers in the same room. 3. Set levels between the two units to within .1db. 4. Set up all listening modes in both products to have the same parameters. 5. Listen to both for as long as you want to any musical material and source you want in any and all modes 6. The key factor is that you may NOT know to which processor you are listening. An ABX comparator or a willing, close-mouthed friend are two ways of accomplishing this.
Prediction: Not one of you will be able to tell which is the expensive brand and which is the Outlaw. If the test were done double-blind, you would not be able to discern if you were listening to the same or different processors much less opine on which is "better." For example, read the results of years of blind testing performed by Peter Aczel. Outlaw, why don't you set up such a test?
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#52735 - 05/03/05 06:37 PM
Re: A challenge to the "golden ears"
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Desperado
Registered: 05/02/02
Posts: 526
Loc: Home on the range
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If that was the case, shouldn't we all just get $99 Sanyo receivers as our processor?
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#52738 - 05/03/05 07:19 PM
Re: A challenge to the "golden ears"
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Gunslinger
Registered: 06/11/04
Posts: 23
Loc: Red Lion PA USA
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Perform the test I laid out above. If you can't hear the difference, why would you spend more? If you can, then spend more. Your example is a little extreme and, of course, my response is necessarily impractical. Recall, however, that the comparison I suggested was between the Outlaw 990 and any other more expensive units, not $99 receivers. You're certainly not going to get the functionality, amplifier power, or build quality in a $99 receiver. But an $1,100 processor built by ultra-cheap foreign labor and sold on the Internet to bypass the retailer? Build that baby in America and sell it at retail, and it's $4,000 or more. Much different story. <...the results [of blind tests] are many times disregarded... [because of their complexity] They are disregarded because they embarrass the "golden ear" types who can do nothing else BUT criticize the method. In 1989, I met J. Gordon Holt at a Stereophile show and asked him why he hated blind testing. He replied with his usual candor, "Because I can never pass the damn things." For those of you who don't know, Holt is the father of subjective listening tests and the founder of Stereophile magazine which he originally published on an erratic schedule from his Philadelphia-suburb home before moving to Arizona. Later, he sold it to John Atkinson et al, who slicked it up, published on time, and went off the deep end editorially more often than was reasonable. In short, Big Daddy listener can't hear differences about which his erstwhile magazine raves.
Returning to the $99 analogy, compare a $99 DVD/CD player with digital auido out to one costing $5,000, and I will be positively flabbergasted if you can hear an ounce of difference. Video with its extra complexity will likely be another story, but even there, there are some $250 models with DVI output that may offer the same comparison.
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#52739 - 05/03/05 07:53 PM
Re: A challenge to the "golden ears"
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Desperado
Registered: 05/02/02
Posts: 526
Loc: Home on the range
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I wasn't being sarcastic in my question. Why couldn't a $99 processor compete with the Outlaw if digital is digital? You mentioned "functionality, amplifier power, or build quality" would be the difference between a $99 receiver and the 990. First, if you are using them as a processor, the amplifier power is irrelevant. As far as build quality and functionality is concerned, neither should a make a difference for pure sound quality of a digital signal, right? So, according to your theory, why couldn't a $99 processor not compete with more expensive processor's on just a digital level?
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#52740 - 05/03/05 09:35 PM
Re: A challenge to the "golden ears"
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Gunslinger
Registered: 06/11/04
Posts: 23
Loc: Red Lion PA USA
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And I wasn't sarcastic in my response. You said receiver, so I mentioned amplifier power.
There is a snobbish attitude among many audiophiles that high cost necessarily equates to high quality, an attitude hardly limited to audio. Yes, quality costs. The question is, how much? Some engineers overdesign to no purpose beyond satisying their egos. I heard a pair of Mark Levinson mono amps, each about the size of a small mid-range computer, too hot to touch, requiring a 220 AC line to operate, costing about $30,000 (I can't recall if that's for one or both, and rated at full power (300 watts) into .5 ohm. Who cares? (Professionals, maybe.) If you're into driving near short circuits, by it. Of course the MLs sounded good, but I doubt they would whoop a Bryston 4B-SST at @$2,500 driving any commercially available speaker system - assuming listeners weren't biased yourself by knowing to which amp they were listening and assuming levels were balanced as close to 0db as possible. I reiterate that the Outlaw 990 should NOT be compared to other $1,000 units because of where and how it is manufactured and how it is marketed.
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#52741 - 05/03/05 09:46 PM
Re: A challenge to the "golden ears"
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Gunslinger
Registered: 04/05/05
Posts: 75
Loc: North of Dallas
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LOL, a group of audio enthusiasts recently did a comparison between a $4,000 Halo amp and a $250 Crown Pro audio XLS 402 amp. We posted our results in the "new amp is making me grin from ear to ear" thread in the AVS Forum. Nobody present could tell which sounded better. In fact, someone on that thread sold his Halo for multiple Crowns.
They are butt ugly but who cares!
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#52742 - 05/03/05 10:01 PM
Re: A challenge to the "golden ears"
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Desperado
Registered: 04/19/05
Posts: 361
Loc: Plano, TX
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Originally posted by Jed M: So, according to your theory, why couldn't a $99 processor not compete with more expensive processor's on just a digital level? A very good point, Jed. If the pre/pro were just a digital switcher, this test would result in exactly what tbng proposes - "not one of you will be able to tell which is the expensive brand and which is the Outlaw." However, the perceived standard of quality for a pre/pro is in the quality of the components of, and design of, the analog signal path. If that were not the perception, we'd all be happily listening to our $99 Sanyos, oblivious to the Outlaw 990s of the world. I think we can all agree on that, yes? Past that, what we hear as a result of the different D/As, circuit designs, potentiometers, etc., works within the boundaries of our perception to determine our particular sonic preferences, and therefore any further discussion goes down the same road as the premium cables vs. lamp cord debate. We can never truly know how much of what we hear is in the signal and hardware vs. what's in our ears and brains, only form an opinion based on the result. I think that, just as everyone's tastes vary, were numerous people to attempt tbng's experiment, we would see an equally numerous diversity of opinion. (though I'm curious to see how a $99 sanyo would fare nonetheless )
_________________________
--Greg
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