Tlday wrote -
"Interesting that the last to be tested was the preferred. Results might change if the order was different. Psychology always affects perception. Also, once the group decided that the last choice was best, was this player then compared back against all of the previous? If A if preferred to B, B over C and C over D, it is not 100% sure that A will be preferred over D."
Your points are spot on! Sorry for not addressing it sooner. If we had more time we would have gone back to compare The APL to the Opus, Meridian and DCS. If we were to do this again, we will do just that.
Ryder wrote -
"The best and most expensive will always be saved for the last, and it usually comes out tops."
The most expensive player evaluated is the latest version of the Meitner and it did not win. Also, recall that each player was assigned a letter code written on a piece of paper and placed in bag. The order of the players was determined by the consecutive order of letters pulled from this process. By chance it turned out the Meitner and APL were last. None of the voters knew the letter assignments, however, until after the comparisons were complete.
The premise of the most expensive item being last and winning has not been the case in previous level-matched digital comparisons we've done. From my own personal experience, this is also not with speaker cables, IC and PC, phonostages and amps. It just happens to be true for cartridges and preamps, but this is my experience only and of course the quest for excellent, high value products continues. ;-)
"Interesting that the last to be tested was the preferred. Results might change if the order was different. Psychology always affects perception. Also, once the group decided that the last choice was best, was this player then compared back against all of the previous? If A if preferred to B, B over C and C over D, it is not 100% sure that A will be preferred over D."
Your points are spot on! Sorry for not addressing it sooner. If we had more time we would have gone back to compare The APL to the Opus, Meridian and DCS. If we were to do this again, we will do just that.
Ryder wrote -
"The best and most expensive will always be saved for the last, and it usually comes out tops."
The most expensive player evaluated is the latest version of the Meitner and it did not win. Also, recall that each player was assigned a letter code written on a piece of paper and placed in bag. The order of the players was determined by the consecutive order of letters pulled from this process. By chance it turned out the Meitner and APL were last. None of the voters knew the letter assignments, however, until after the comparisons were complete.
The premise of the most expensive item being last and winning has not been the case in previous level-matched digital comparisons we've done. From my own personal experience, this is also not with speaker cables, IC and PC, phonostages and amps. It just happens to be true for cartridges and preamps, but this is my experience only and of course the quest for excellent, high value products continues. ;-)