I just fell upon this thread -- with all due respect to the test organizers / participants, I want to explain why I believe that the test tells us next to nothing about the digital components under test (Nilthepill, jfz, Guidocorona and Newbee are all on to something).
First, no hi-fi component is more dependent upon warm-up than a CD player. CD players generally need one to two days to reach thermal stability, and over the course of warm up, their sound can change dramatically. As for this test (as reported), giving a CD player 20-25 minutes to warm up will not tell you what it really sounds like -- absolutely not, especially given the importance of power supplies in high-end players. What we've been told is which player to buy if you intend to treat your components like a rack system.
Second, if there is any question as to whether the players under test had adequate break-in, then the test is flawed. The sound of components can change dramatically up through 500 hours, and most continue to open up and change through 1,000 hours.
Third, six hours of listening parsed between five players is not enough time for a person to become accustomed to the performance of a component -- months are required. Anyone who has lived with a fair amount of spare components will tell you that the new kid on the block sometimes get sold or goes into the closet after yesterday's favorite goes back in the system. The performance of hi-end components in high-resolution systems is subtle and confounding -- preamps and CD players in particular -- and what sounds preferable this week can become unsatisfying next month.
I fully assume the good faith of the participants and note they appear to have tried hard to put together a controlled comparison, but with all due respect, this is not the way it works.
First, no hi-fi component is more dependent upon warm-up than a CD player. CD players generally need one to two days to reach thermal stability, and over the course of warm up, their sound can change dramatically. As for this test (as reported), giving a CD player 20-25 minutes to warm up will not tell you what it really sounds like -- absolutely not, especially given the importance of power supplies in high-end players. What we've been told is which player to buy if you intend to treat your components like a rack system.
Second, if there is any question as to whether the players under test had adequate break-in, then the test is flawed. The sound of components can change dramatically up through 500 hours, and most continue to open up and change through 1,000 hours.
Third, six hours of listening parsed between five players is not enough time for a person to become accustomed to the performance of a component -- months are required. Anyone who has lived with a fair amount of spare components will tell you that the new kid on the block sometimes get sold or goes into the closet after yesterday's favorite goes back in the system. The performance of hi-end components in high-resolution systems is subtle and confounding -- preamps and CD players in particular -- and what sounds preferable this week can become unsatisfying next month.
I fully assume the good faith of the participants and note they appear to have tried hard to put together a controlled comparison, but with all due respect, this is not the way it works.