It's not a contradiction it It is from the renatch.
Got a link?
Tim
It's not a contradiction it It is from the renatch.
I keep reading the original challenge. The prinary speaker was the the mid range and high frequency of the Infinity. They aslo used Rogers Ls3/5a. The Brtish mini-moitor with limited bass response. In his video that is posted somewhere above Bob siad he came for prepared for solid state amps. Sterophile admitted they sat out to "trick" him. He had to scramble to set it up for tube anps. Unless you can give me a quote saying they used another speaker and evaluiated for bass response I'll maintian my original positon.I'd be interested in that myself.
Tom
Got a link?
Tim
I have not kept up with the thread. What link is that? The original challenge? If so, here is the article: http://carvermk2.com/Docs/Carver Stereophile Challenge.pdfGot a link?
Tim
Tim will be happy to know that Carver could lower the danping factor of an amp to alter its bass chahracteristic.
I do love a good sloppy, slow, musical bass.
Tim
To quote Ronald Reagan, " There you go again,"
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
IMHO high-end systems have an high Q factor - they can have a high quality but with a very narrow and sharp peak.
Don,
IMHO, the concept of "hear differences" as usually considered in WBF - assemble a system, listen to it, and then quickly change to another, is not an high-end activity or even challenge.
You have to assemble a system that shows the best of an amplifier to make a fair comparison between it and another one. If a system sounds lousy or just reasonable, most probably any amplifier will sound similar to the current one. IMHO high-end systems have an high Q factor - they can have a high quality but with a very narrow and sharp peak. I know some people will find this fact unacceptable and not practical, but it is part of the life of an audiophile.
I just ran across this:
I am not an audiophile. Audiophiles love audio and equipment, but rarely music. An audiophile is someone who can't listen for more than a few minutes before stopping to change capacitors or swap cables. Audiophiles spend more on equipment than they spend on music and concerts. They will own dozens of different headphones, cables and amplifiers, and receive their pleasure from fiddling with all this gear. Audiophiles listen to their gear, instead of the music. Audiophiles just as often are listening to recordings of thunderstorms or locomotives, while I, as one professional studio musician shared with me, enjoy great music even if it's coming over a 3" speaker. I know good reproduction, but it's ultimately all about the music, not the hardware. If I let myself get caught up in the hardware, I'd have no time to enjoy music.
Standard Musician/recording engineer cliche. Heard it a million times.
I still want to know why sound and music are mutually exclusive. No they're trying to blame and pass the buck of their doing a mediocre job onto the audiophile.
Besides the author's condescending and exceedingly arrogant tone (yeah we all know professional musicians) many of these so-called new gen of recording engineers are nothing more than dial jockeys and ProTool fools (see there's the antonym for audio photos).![]()
And who is he to pass judgement on why and what anyone should do with their audio system? It's enough if they are having fun. The idea of what works for me will work for you nauseates me. Oh, it's called the principle of individuality.
| Steve Williams Site Founder | Site Owner | Administrator | Ron Resnick Site Owner | Administrator | Julian (The Fixer) Website Build | Marketing Managersing |