I Just Don't Hear It - I wish I did


I am frustrated because I am an audiophile who cannot discern details from so many of the methods praised by other audiophiles. I joke about not having golden ears. That said, I can easily discern and appreciate good soundstage, image, balance, tone, timbre, transparency and even the synergy of a system. I am however unable to hear the improvements that result from, say a piece of Teflon tape or a $5.00 item from the plumbing aisle at Home Depot. Furthermore, I think it is grossly unfair that I must pay in multiples of one hundred, or even one thousand just to gain relatively slight improvements in transparency, detail, timbre soundstage, etc., when other audiophiles can gain the same level of details from a ten dollar tweak. In an effort to sooth my frustration, I tell myself that my fellow audiophiles are experiencing a placebo effect of some sort. Does anyone else struggle to hear….no wait; does anyone else struggle to comprehend how someone else can hear the perceived benefits gained by the inclusion of any number of highly touted tweaks/gimmicks (brass screws, copper couplers, Teflon tape, maple hardwood, racquet balls, etc.) I mean, the claims are that these methods actually result in improved soundstage, image, detail (“blacker backgrounds”), clarity, bass definition, etc.
Am I alone in my frustration here?
2chnlben
I would love to debate Intelligent Design vs. Neo-Darwinism here. However, that would be off-topic.
I respect your Materialist opinions, Nietzschelover, but don't appreciate your injecting them into threads. You sound like an evangelist for Humanism. Please keep it to yourself. Thank you. :)
Bobby palkovic pretty tweaky too!

"Palkovic's Conditioned Response" not to be confused with the dog thing...!

That one was for Nietzsche.
Shadorne, the comment you quoted was regarding putting speaker cables on risers, not putting the speakers on risers.

Oops my bad. I retract my statement then. There is indeed no strong reason to use cable elevators in that there is no credible science behind this concept. Insulated elevators are used for uninsulated power wires in free air as it is cheaper than insulating the wires. These are designed to prevent the bare wires shorting to ground. In some cases they have intricate shapes so that the path length (over the surface)to ground is long (this can help when it is wet or raining or the piece becomes dusty/dirty). Of course if it looks cool, keeps wires off the carpet where they can be damaged by traffic and for those that like it - then by all means go for it but it would be an odd situation that would create audible effects from this procedure.