Did anyone else read that in a pirate's voice?With all the talk about typos I went looking for a document that described the dangers of blind spell checking. I could not find it. Here is a different one.
Ode to My Spell Checker.”
Eye halve a spelling checker
It came with my pea sea.
It plainly marks four my revue miss steaks eye kin knot sea.
Eye strike a quay and type a word and weight for it to say
Weather eye yam wrong oar write.
It shows me strait a weigh as soon as a mist ache is maid.
It nose bee fore two long and eye can put the error rite.
Its rare lea ever wrong.
Eye have run this poem threw it,
I am shore your pleased to no.
Its letter perfect awl the way.
My checker told me sew.
Holy! LOL!
Is Bathurst a V8 supercars race? The guy who scared the bejeezus out of us flying us around in a modded C63 AMG was Tim Slade. He said he races in that category.
Yes and on further thought there might be a bit of a suprise there, in that, a solid state $700 amp, using non audiophile components, had a sweet midrange, indistinguishable from arguably the salient point of the $5K tube amp "sound", the midrange. Thats a bit big to think about IMO. Remarkable.
Footnote 4: One of the pairs of loudspeakers was the Infinity RS-1B, but with the Conrad-Johnson or Carver amplifiers driving the midrange/treble panels only.—John Atkinson
The Final Achievement
After this last bit of tweaking, where Bob was able to reinstate his 70dB null while driving a very difficult load, we now had what sounded like two absolutely identical amplifiers. No matter what speakers we used, every "difference" we thought we had isolated turned out to be there, in equal quantity, when we swapped amplifiers.
No matter what speakers we used, every "difference" we thought we had isolated turned out to be there, in equal quantity, when we swapped amplifiers.
Give me a little help. it says "every" difference" we thought we had isolated turned out to be there, in equal quantity when we swapped amplifiers ." if the differences remained then they are not identical.
With respect to the Carver challenge. While carver may have proved that he could easily duplicate the sound of certain high endamps. He also inadveretnly proved there was in fact a difference to be matched. Unlike ABX challenges that maintain there is no difference.Iindeeed he validated the golden ears. They knew the amplifier sounded different they just did not know why.
From JAHello Gregadd
Sorry I didn't mean to insult you but you have to read a lot more carefully. Here is footnote 4 where I guess that no bass quote came from.
The situation with the Carver Stereophile Challenges is complicated. The original challenge in 1985 (before I joined the magazine) involved blind testing the prototype Carver amplifier against a pair of Conrad-Johnson monoblocks on just the treble and midrange panels of Infinity RS1B loudspeakers. (The Infinity speakers used powered woofers.) The report on this Challenge can be found at http://www.stereophile.com/content/carver-challenge . And yes, it did appear that the final version of the Carver amplifier sounded like the C-Js - but only in the midrange and above.For the rematch at the beginning of 1987, I insisted that the amplifiers be compared full-range, using Celestion SL600 speakers. I measured the null as mentioned above with the amplifiers driving these speakers, and the maximum null was indeed just 36dB and then only in the midrange. Bob Carver subsequently said in an interview - see http://www.stereophile.com/content/b...himself-page-3 - that 36dB was certainly not enough to guarantee that the amplifiers would be indistinguishable. We did a series of blind tests at that time and Bob Carver agreed that J. Gordon Holt _could_ distinguish the amplifiers by ear, contrary to what you say. I did take part in these tests, but when it came time to score my tests, Bob Carver couldn't remember what amplifier I had been listening to in each trial.This was all reported in the April 1987 issue of Stereophile - that article will be posted in our on-line archives next year, 25 years after the event.
So it's clear they used more than one pair of speakers. And finaly a quote from the text
Rob
Many tests have proven you can hear differences among amplifiers if they are large enough differences. However, within a certain range, the differences tend to be far less than what people expect. For example, a number of SS amps sound virtually identical when operated well within their power bands and with speakers that are not overly taxing loads. Ditto tube amps, but I would not expect the tube and SS amps to sound identical into a speaker. Bob was trying to prove he could match the sound of the big CJ tube amp with a SS amp design.
All IMO, IME, FWIWFM, YMMV, blah blah blah - Don
Whenever they thought they had identified a difference, upon returning to the other amplifier they found the difference was not there. Bad grammar but the meaning seems pretty clear.
Give me a little help. it says "every" difference" we thought we had isolated turned out to be there, in equal quantity when we swapped amplifiers ." if the differences remained then they are not identical.
It would also appear that even if different speakers were used the decision was based on the Infinity speakers.
We wanted Bob to fail. We wanted to hear a difference. Among other things, it would have reassured us that our ears really are among the best in the business, despite “70-dB nulls.”
There were times when we were sure that we had heard such a difference. But, I repeat, each time we’d put the other amplifier in, listen to the same musical passage again, and hear exactly the same thing. According to the rules of the game, Bob had won.
You need to pull some quotes. In context. Just saying "they said the opposite" without any evidence is as meaningless as shouting "I know you are but what am I."
Tim
We did a series of blind tests at that time and Bob Carver agreed that J. Gordon Holt _could_ distinguish the amplifiers by ear, contrary to what you say. I did take part in these tests, but when it came time to score my tests, Bob Carver couldn't remember what amplifier I had been listening to in each trial.This was all reported in the April 1987 issue of Stereophile - that article will be posted in our on-line archives next year, 25 years after the event.
Stereoeditor is a member of WBF. If you doubt anyhting he said please challenge him. Ask him for the link I take him at his word. As I would you.I'd be interested in that myself.
Tom
I posted this many times:
It's not a contradiction it It is from the renatch.Sorry if I missed it before, but I still don't see the context. This is a contradiction of the results of the Carver challenge. Where does it come from? What is the context?
Tim
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