Problem is, when most of you are put to blind tests, you flunk being able to tell the source from the compressed one. And no, resolving system has nothing to do with it. The fact that you say that tells me you don’t know what it takes to hear such differences. As a trained listener in this domain, I can tell differences with just about any headphone on any system.
Yes, this is, I find, one of the most common myths among audiophiles. Whenever someone raises skeptical doubts about claims made about, say the audible character of cables, the response if the skeptic doesn’t agree is the "ears or gear" - either you don’t have the hearing acuity the Golden Eared Audiophile does, or your system just isn’t "resolving enough" like you need a "super resolving system" to hear these differences.
There are various problems with this idea:
1. Subtle sonic differences, if real, can be heard across a large range of transducers. Sure we can get to something like the worst laptop audio or whatever, but it really doesn’t take THAT much to produce speakers on which you can hear very subtle differences. I’ve worked in tons of different studio conditions, different monitors, headphones of varying quality and ALL have allowed me to hear and make the subtle changes I need to for my job. Give me an old pair of radio shack minimus 7 speakers and if I do a subtle EQ tweak to bring out the upper mids, you will hear it!
2. The type of sonic differences often ascribed to (for instance) cables is often fairly dramatic - the "highs opening up" the bass becoming more punchy or extended, more forward in tonal balance, more laid back etc. These are all qualities, if that obvious, should be audible on most speakers. It’s why different mastering is obvious on most speakers, from cheap to expensive.
3. We have audiophiles reporting these "obvious sonic differences" across a wide range of systems and speakers. It’s not just the well-heeled audiophiles with the Super Resolving Systems. Just go to the typical amazon page for some set of audiophile cables (even not expensive ones) and you’ll see audiophiles with very modest systems reporting "obvious differences" with the cables in question.
From this you have either two implications for those making the Resolving System demand:
A. It’s a red herring to demand that someone must own a Very Resolving System in order to evaluate whether a cable is making a difference.
Or:
B. If these differences aren’t obvious on less resolving systems, plenty of those audiophiles with modestly ’resolving’ systems are imagining they are hearing differences between cables. Which would only emphasize the problem variable of listener bias in the first place.