Well, well well.
Firstly, let me start with a big apology.
I was a bit confounded-yet pleased- with the sudden switch, suddenly there ARE measurable differences which account for the perceived sound variations, a good point to reach BTW so we seem to have reached a better level of debate or at least a far greater base of agreement. In fact, if that is the new position then there is much less to disagree with (simply the little matter of audibility, that is one that will never be answered).
Anyways, here is the apology and my great **** up.
I misquoted the burmeister quote from micro! Only just found that out when I went waaay back in the thread. Just to clarify and show how I led it astray, here is what was quoted by micro
Proof is given by the fact that it is possible to build two devices, which have exactly the same technical data but a completely different sound.. (I highlighted what it was that I inadvertantly changed, as you will see next)
I read that first thing in the morning and five pages later when I got to the end of that day I posted my response with the following error (from memory at that stage)
IDENTICAL measurements give COMPLETELY DIFFERENT sound.
Ha, even worse is that as I typed that I did not even have the excuse of poor memory cause I actually quoted micros post (oh the shame) in my response so it was there to reread at the time (as I did just this second)...just goes to show beware of your assumptions. That that is one that has always bitten me on the bum in life it galls me that I made that error again.
Anyways, that is the apology and has had a lot to do with the curve the thread took for which I have to take a lot of responsibility.
I am not completely responsible thank heavens

as even tho I started it with that error the baton was competently taken up by micro who indeed insisted that a dac chip from the same batch can sound completely different and hence from that I have managed to salvage a little bit of pride from my debacle!
That still leaves us with the idea that measurements-specifically manufacturers quality control-are insufficient to ensure consistency of sound across the board. All the implications that stems from that still apply such as a dac chip from the same batch sounding as different as two highend amplifiers supposedly do.
Is that the thought of all or is it a minority opinion. It looks increasingly like a minority one as the tenor seems to have changed since I went to bed. It now seems that measurements are likely able to show differences between gear, which in a very roundabout way (as long as I am not again misquoting five pages of posts from memory!

) brings us back to a conundrum...when we started it was 'measurements don't tell us all and cannot predict or explain sound', then due to my error-which seems to have at least flushed a few birds into the air-it turned out that in order to extricate ourselves from that mess we find that measurements DO show/explain perceived sonic differences (we need that to get away from the logical fallacy that things which measure exactly sound different ya see) yet I doubt we would now agree that measurements show and explain sonics, we only needed that prop temporarily I'd say.
So it seems it is a moveable stance, when needed (to dig ourselves out of a hole) we can embrace measurements yet then revert no doubt to the default that measurements don't explain anything (a reminder that was the impetus to start the thread, Jeff disagreed with the basic 'damn measurements' stance of the article writer....does this mean BTW that the majority of the posters here now agree with Jeff that the article was hopelessly flawed? that we do indeed need measurements? Good, now go back and find more of the many strawmen she conjured)
Would it get me off the hook if I pretended I made my error deliberately so we could flush those birds out??? It would? Beauty. So as you can now see, I had a cunning plan to get subjectivists to agree with us on the value and utility of measurements!

