I could live on digital alone. I'm just glad I don't have to.
Well said Jack, and that includes the entire post and not just the sentence I quoted.
I could live on digital alone. I'm just glad I don't have to.
Frantz-Here is my question, and it's not soley directed to you. Bruce talked about fooling people and Gary talked about fooling people and other people have talked about fooling other people, but how many people have been fooled in their own home over their own system playing material they know well? I think it would be less likely to happen than under show conditions in an unfamiliar room with unfamiliar gear playing unfamiliar music.
(...) It seems like a lost case. I cannot begin to understand how we continue to believe that our ears cannot be fooled when all of us can be (and many of us have been) fooled on a consistent and repetitive basis.
Oh Well!! Time to go back lurking on the issue
Frantz,
I remember than when I was still a teenager in secondary school I studied similar maters when we debated Descartes’ Meditations on First Philosophy . Sense information could be wrong, our life could be part of a dream of an evil creature and similar issues. I do not remember it anymore how, but Rene Descartes could deal with it. Do you think we need a good philosopher to help us in this issue?![]()
(...) Ok no more philosophy!! ... We need instruments and we will supplement when they are insufficient to form a conclusion, we will use our senses...
Well if we are to move forward - perhaps we can describe what we hear in vinyl, and the measurement brigade can propose a measurement that will demonstrate the difference? If there is no such measurement, then perhaps the measurement brigade could permanently shut up and admit that they don't have the tools to do it.
Well if we are to move forward - perhaps we can describe what we hear in vinyl, and the measurement brigade can propose a measurement that will demonstrate the difference? If there is no such measurement, then perhaps the measurement brigade could permanently shut up and admit that they don't have the tools to do it.
As you accepted to go in philosophy - I expressly tried to avoid any reference to metaphysics, but you could not resist, I suggest an alternative formulation. We use our senses, and after we reach conclusions (using the adequate perceptual methods) we then take the instruments and try to establish a metric to reproduce with reliability and consistency what we have established using our senses. As the instruments are not completely able to re-create such system, we still need our senses.
You have foobar? Download the ABX Comparator HERE, then encode a piece of music in 320 and test yourself with the ABX component/add-on. Report to us ...
Well I think one question is what are the positive measurements? All we seem to hear are the negative ones here!
Lemme see. I use a protractor, alignment jig, VTF scale, test discs and strobes. I would love to be able to do all these things by ear with consistency but that is beyond me.
I have an LP mastering system and a CD mastering system. I'm probably arguing nuances, but FWIW here are my experiences. The biggest limitation in CD is indeed in the media itself and not the mastering.
The same is not true of the LP. Here, the limitation has to do with the arm and cartridge. The mastering side of the LP is by any comparison the most unlimited thing in audio. LP cutters can do things in terms of dynamic range that are simply not possible with any other part of the audio system except for perhaps a microphone.
It is the limitations of playback that define how the LP is to be cut, not the limitations of the cutter. And the limitation of the LP has to do with the ability of the arm/cartridge to reproduce what is in the groove. The cutter itself, and the resulting vinyl, has abilities way beyond any digital system. But the cartridges and tone arms do have limitations and it is those limitations that the mastering engineer has to be cognizant of; this is the difference between a good LP and an excellent one.
The lathe can cut anything! It has dynamic range that must be very much in the range of the human ear itself- certainly far beyond that of any digital. It is this unlimited quality about them that makes them tricky to work with, as the cartridges and tone arms are the area where you have severe limited imposed- bandwidth, dynamic range, distortion and the like. The ability of the engineer to understand what can be reproduced is the mark of a good engineer.
But in general, the processing done by an LP mastering machine is minuscule compared to the damage done by an analog to digital converter, and all the digital process that follows.
There are those that say its a miracle that the LP system works, but its not a miracle, its simple engineering and an understanding of the nuances.
I had arguably the best digital system made (Stahltek, $72,000) in our room at RMAF. The designer was there. I played him a cut on both the digital (192KHz 24-bit) and LP. He simply turned to me and said 'Digital has such a long way to go...' He was not mad- he loves analog, and I think its that pragmatic approach that is why he makes the best digital.
Ralph Karsten of Atmasphere has been participating in a similar thread on Audiogon and had some interesting observations. I have taken the liberty of quoting him. (Moderators, you can take this down if it's not kosher!) Here is the thread http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1340176293&openfrom&1&4#1
From June 27th:
From June 28th:
From June 29th:
The lathe can cut anything! It has dynamic range that must be very much in the range of the human ear itself- certainly far beyond that of any digital. It is this unlimited quality about them that makes them tricky to work with, as the cartridges and tone arms are the area where you have severe limited imposed- bandwidth, dynamic range, distortion and the like. The ability of the engineer to understand what can be reproduced is the mark of a good engineer.
No disrespect to Ralph Karsten he knows hings about Audio than I can't even imagine exist but telling me that: (...)
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