I actually liked Frank too. I also like Tom by the way. The repetition however reminded me of Frankie. 
Tomelex of course..... and Both!![]()
I could be wrong, Ethan, but I don't think a null test would address the issue, because I think some in this discussion are supposing that accurate reproduction of the input (recording) is not necessarily the goal.
are null tests revealing differences between amplifiers that the stock measurements aren't?
Or are we back to the same ol', same ol' refrain - all (reasonably built amplifiers) sound the same & measure the same?
If a null test shows all differences at 80+ dB down, then those difference are irrelevant whether people understand it or not.
Indeed, Ethan, as DonH & others have said here, your nulls are unbelievable if you are testing the full replay chain i.e you are testing the output from the speakers.
Of course, if you are just testing the signal that comes from the outputs of an amplifier then you haven't being reading the last number of pages about the interaction between amplifier & speaker.
We have to be careful in assuming that "people had actually been able to do it for real." without examining the test procedure & evidence of the results!I did sort of describe how I would try to do this sort of thing in post #1175 - without realising that people had actually been able to do it for real. If we don't believe it's possible then we're presumably holding our hands up and admitting that there may be all sorts of mysterious gaps in our knowledge of what amplifiers do - which I'm not prepared to believe! I can believe that getting a null might be difficult, but I would be going for a software post-processing null so could apply phase shifts etc. as necessary (but surely having to apply something as simple as a phase shift is still potentially controversial with regards to its effect on the sound).
Atkinson: Because one of the things which came out of that whole business for me was how unstable the null was. If you breathed near the amplifiers, the depth of the null would change and the position of the null would change.
Carver: If you let the sunlight shine on an amplifier that's sitting there with a 70dB null, the null will go higher. Or deeper. Less null.
Atkinson: This is the crux of the matter...
Carver: A 70dB null is a very steep null. It's really down to the roots of the universe and things like that. 70dB nulls aren't possible to achieve in production.
Atkinson: What is your target null between the Silver Seven-t and the original Silver Seven?
Carver: About 36dB. When you play music, the null will typically hover around the 36dB area. So it's not a perfect null. No question about it.
Atkinson: It's 98.5% the same...
Carver: It's not a bad null.
We have to be careful in assuming that "people had actually been able to do it for real." without examining the test procedure & evidence of the results!
It's also interesting to see what a professional who uses null testing, Bob Carver, has to say about it http://www.stereophile.com/content/bob-carver-carving-name-himself-page-3
So if Carver can't achieve -70dB " the roots of the universe" & "70dB nulls aren't possible to achieve in production." how does Ethan do it?
Fascinating stuff, and I can't say I'm surprised at how difficult it is. But... it is sounding as though there's a huge gap that subjectivists can walk through. If the 'straight wire with gain' changes if the sun shines on it, then it's also going to change while it's playing music. And if it doesn't show up in the conventional tests, then we'll never know what it was doing to the music.
My suggestion would be to do it all in software and 'auto-null' i.e. allow the software to track the null in non-real time, telling us what it has to do to achieve it. If it's a tiny gain change as the temperature changes then maybe that's not too controversial. If it's a significant wobble after a sharp transient then that's more interesting.
by means of Audio DiffMaker and tested also on the same audio sample three audio interfaces : RME Fireface 400, RME Babyface and Steinberg MR816X. Here below the 'correlated null depth' figures (both last ones) from Audio DiifMaker, the higher the figures in dB, the closer to the original the AD-DA loop:
Mytek 8 x 192
-1,002sec, 0,450dB (L), 0,553dB (R)..Corr Depth: 35,3 dB (L), 36,9 dB (R)
Orpheus
-1sec, 0,075dB (L), 0,064dB (R)..Corr Depth: 30,8 dB (L), 32,4 dB (R)
Fireface 400
-36,94usec, 0,298dB (L), 0,311dB (R)..Corr Depth: 30,2 dB (L), 31,8 dB (R)
MR816X
-2,101msec, 1,104dB (L), 0,605dB (R)..Corr Depth: 19,1 dB (L), 21,0 dB (R)
Babyface
1,555usec, 0,352dB (L), 0,414dB (R)..Corr Depth: 9,2 dB (L), 10,8 dB (R)
What you are talking about is already available in software product called AudioDiffmaker.
There are further null tests on this site which are also of interest. As you can see, again nowhere near 80dB nulls reported by Ethan. Why?
Are we sure Ethan said he has actually measured 80 dB nulls, or just that if they were achieved it would mean that the amplifiers were sonically identical (and from what Bob Carver said many years ago, maybe only -70 dB nulls would be adequate for that conclusion)?? Furthermore, from what Carver says it sounds pretty unlikely that any two current production amps will null even to -40 dB under real world conditions.
Are you suggesting that Ethan is stating something which is unachievable in real-world testing? Are you suggesting that he is then using this hypothetical as a strawman argument "If a null test shows all differences at 80+ dB down, then those difference are irrelevant whether people understand it or not. That's half the battle, just getting people to understand the unreliability of their own hearing." ?
A straw man, known in the UK as an Aunt Sally, is a type of argument and is an informal fallacy based on misrepresentation of an opponent's position.[1] To "attack a straw man" is to create the illusion of having refuted a proposition by replacing it with a superficially similar yet unequivalent proposition (the "straw man"), and refuting it, without ever having actually refuted the original position.[1][2]
If there really were some as-yet unknown aspect of audio fidelity, it would have been revealed 50+ years ago in a null test. The original Hewlett-Packard distortion analyzers used nulling, and more modern methods can null complete music tracks and determine what remains. So the notion that some audiophiles can hear aspects of fidelity that can't be measured is easily disproved. I've explained this so many times in the past, I don't understand why we're still discussing it.
Ethan Winer said:Yes, exactly.jkeny said:Or are we back to the same ol', same ol' refrain - all (reasonably built amplifiers) sound the same & measure the same?
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