cleeds
geoffkait
Well, actually you can fool blind tests. Blind tests can give misleading or just plain wrong results just like any other type of test. Operator error, mistake in the system, maybe the listener has a cold ...
Absolutely true. And establishing a proper double-blind test is more difficult than it might appear. If the test isn't properly conducted, then obviously the results aren't valid.
Blind testing has great value to designers and manufacturers. To end-user audiophiles, not so much.
>>>>is there really such a thing as a proper double blind test? The one The Amazing Randi administered involved many protocols including having to pick the correct thing under test 10 consecutive times. There were other constraints as well, sometimes negotiable, such as when and where the test would take place and how many people would participate and WHAT SYSTEM would be used for the test.