What do in store listening tests prove?


Please don't take this as the next swipe at retail HT stores. No hidden agendas to boost my ego or salve my conscience. Just a question that I know you all must have more experience with.

When you demo a piece in a theater or studio at a store, what is it really telling you? My instincts suggest to me that all you are really able to validate is how you like the products' sound or performance relative to the the other components it is attached to and the acoustical qualities (or lack thereof) of that particular room setup.

Is there any way to make some educated interpolation of how a product will sound in your own personal listening environment based upon how it sounds in the showroom, short of taking it home and demoing it?

Thanks.
rogocop
With the exception of speakers, in store demos are now of little use to me as I already have a good home stereo system. Any new equipment I consider, I insist on an in-home audition.

But if you're just starting out in high-end audio, you probably will need in-store demos, and hopefully you can find a good sales rep to work with. They can be an invaluable help in putting together a good sounding system-- especially if they have several brands and types of gear available. Cheers. Craig
Well if you dislike the sound it will eliminate it from your list, if the dealer can not make the gear they sell sound good in their show room then it is safe to say that it either sounds poor or they are morons, either way you shouldn't buy what ever you are listening to there. If you do in fact like the sound, its time to talk about an in home demo. So you are right you can't make an accurate decision in the store, but you can make an eduacated in home demo decision. That being said I have never bought a piece with out some serious listening time in my room- its a lot cheaper that way- trust me.
Two things:how badly you really want to buy anything and how good this store is.The rest is questionable unless you already know how most components in a particular system sound.
I buy stuff without hearing it anywhere. No problems. In-store - unless, as Tim says, the dealer can make it sound good, there's no reason to consider it. Listen nearfield. If not speakers, listen through speakers you know. In-store demos of speakers are usually enough to discern the character of a speaker, because speakers are very different from each other and their quality shows through even in an unfamiliar room. But, with big speakers with lots of bass, although it's difficult to arrange, an in-home demo is best.
If you bring with you some music you are familiar with and have heard on a number of different systems, you can tell something about transparency, sound staging, extension, and so on. If you are listening to something unfamiliar, it's much more difficult. The easiest way to impress is to play a well engineered recording.