The JC Whitney syndrome


Those of you that have tinkered with cars as a hobby probably remember the JC Whitney catalogue. This was a mail order catalogue that offered various performance upgrades that could be installed on your car. What always amused me were the claims made by each product. There were literally hundreds of add on products, each claiming to "increase HP by x amount" and/or "improve gas mileage by y MPG". I used to joke that if you installed all the accessories being offered, you would be able to add thousands of horsepower while getting over 100 MPG.  This is not to say that each product taken on its own wouldn't have some merit, but the improvements are not necessarily cumulative.

Same goes for audio. Every product (I'm referring mainly to "tweeks" here) claims to offer "tighter and more extended base, clearer highs, better transparency, freedom from coloration, less listening fatigue, greater detail, etc., etc. The benefits (real or imagined) of audiophile wall sockets, power conditioners and chords, cables, vibration pods and spikes, equipment racks, cable supporters, binding posts and terminations made of unobtainium, etc. etc. are typically not cumulative. While any of the aforementioned items may provide a sonic benefit on its own, that benefit may be lost or diminished by the addition of additional tweeks. In such cases, 1 + 1 often equals something less than 2. Your system may have reached a point where the addition of a normally beneficial tweak provides no audible benefit at all. 

Don't fall victim to the JC Whitney syndrome.

J.Chip
128x128jchiappinelli
J.Chip I know what you mean.It's easy to get carried away by adding thing upon thing until it's hard to remember which does what.Sometimes it's an improvement to remove those footers or tube dampers that were put in four years ago just to see what happens.
Yup, removing Tube Dampers is always an improvement. The only exception being Herbies Tube Dampers, all the others being excellent examples of how audiophiles embrace an idea that seems too good not to be true. 
I agree with the OP.  There are many tweaks that just don’t work and are just silly.  One man’s tweak is another man’s snake oil.
I do not think anybody is saying tweaks cannot and will not work at all..

I get the premise that too many tweaks piled upon top of each other could result in the fact that each individual tweak may not achieve its promise or full potential.

However it is also true and potentially likely that they may magnify each other's results as well with 1+1+1+1+1+1=16!

With tweaks anything is possible and as far as "snake oil tweaks".....

Well common sense should still rule the day.

Pity then that common sense is the least common of all senses nowadays.
Of the usual audiophile tweaks, including the really controversial and way out ones, one sees or reads about there actually has never been one that was found to be a hoax or a fraud or any such thing. On the other hand, what we do find are audiophiles who either didn’t follow directions, have serious problems or errors in their audio systems, an audio system that is insufficiently resolving, lack of listening skill or experience, or undiagnosed hearing problems.