Did Amir Change Your Mind About Anything?


It’s easy to make snide remarks like “yes- I do the opposite of what he says.”  And in some respects I agree, but if you do that, this is just going to be taken down. So I’m asking a serious question. Has ASR actually changed your opinion on anything?  For me, I would say 2 things. I am a conservatory-trained musician and I do trust my ears. But ASR has reminded me to double check my opinions on a piece of gear to make sure I’m not imagining improvements. Not to get into double blind testing, but just to keep in mind that the brain can be fooled and make doubly sure that I’m hearing what I think I’m hearing. The second is power conditioning. I went from an expensive box back to my wiremold and I really don’t think I can hear a difference. I think that now that I understand the engineering behind AC use in an audio component, I am not convinced that power conditioning affects the component output. I think. 
So please resist the urge to pile on. I think this could be a worthwhile discussion if that’s possible anymore. I hope it is. 

chayro

"So you are saying that you learn nothing from measurements of these two speakers?"

 

Yeah they have different frequency response charts by your methods.

I would avoid looking at that before listening so I know I don’t have a bias.

And flat FR is sometimes boring.

Virtually useless and perhaps harmful for deciding which sounds better.

Maybe I like resonances at those fregs.

40+ years of research into this topic shows that you are highly unlikely, when you don't the identity of those speakers, to prefer one with resonances and all those frequency response errors.  

Regardless, let's state that your assertion that I responded to is profoundly wrong:

And just to repeat, Amir has made me realize how little measurements actually matter. 

In the hands of anyone with any familiarity with them, they are powerful tools to determine fidelity and tonality of those speakers.  And clearly, absolutely clearly, show the design mistakes in one of them.

The right response from you would have been that you were talking about electronics and not speakers and headphones.  But you are deciding to double down with "I may this" or "I may that."  W

I have most definitely pass double blind tests of high-res vs CD. Keep in mind that a high-res vs CD test can NOT be done in a browser.   I know because my team at Microsoft wrote the audio stack. 

So Amir, if you knew all about blind testing at MS, how do you explain this AFTER you retired?

https://www.avsforum.com/threads/establishing-differences-by-the-10-volume-method.1136745/#post-16216826

I did not level match anything. However, once I found one source was worse than the other, I would then turn up the volume to counter any effect there. Indeed, doing so would close the gap some but it never changed the outcome. Note that the elevated level clearly made that source sound louder than the other. So the advantage was put on the losing side.

Which version of Amir is to be believed above?

I not only passed this test, but I created a video on how I managed to do that.  It required knowledge of signal processing of what you lose when going from 24 bit to 16 bit, and of course, training required to be able to hear such small differences.  Here is the video which again, I post earlier:

https://youtu.be/0KX2yk-9ygk

Ah, the video where you are sitting in front of all the electronic analyzers that you used to visually real time analyze the ABX signals?

How many tests have you passed not run by Amir?

Would you do a proctored one at PAF 2024? Or only doctored?

 

@nonoise 

Imagine if this were a watch forum and someone went to extreme lengths showing you how your brand of watch is way overpriced for what it does and that a cheaper one is much more accurate and he had the graphs to prove it!

You have the start of a great analogy.  Sadly you got the middle and ending quite wrong.

Do imagine that this is the watch market except that all that anyone cares about is accuracy of time keeping.  Manufacturers learn this and claim that their watches are more accurate than any other watch.  Except, unlike the real watch market, they provide no measure of that accuracy.

Imagine further that companies realize that since no proof is needed, any all things can be sold under the guise of better accuracy. Companies come to market selling aftermarket watchbands that they say improves fidelity.  Ergo, they can charge more for some of these bands than you can buy entire watches.

This goes on for a while until a retired engineer, technologies and manager from said watch market says to people on his watch forum that he has highly instrumentation to measure such accuracy.  He starts to measure a few watches he has bought and shows how some of very accurate while the others are not even though they cost more money.

He publishes that result and next thing you know, watch owners want to know where their watches land.  So they start to send him their watches -- some cheap and some very expensive and he tests and publishes them.  Soon it becomes obvious that how much you paid for something does NOT at all predict how accurate said watch is.  And that the claims made by companies can trivially be shown to be wrong.

Watch owners love the clarity the above testing brings to market and increasingly support that activity by visiting the site, sending more product, and helping offset the cost of running this activity.

You would think every watch owner would be in favor of this.  But no, prior to this development, folks were looking at a watch and without any evidence, claiming that they have found the most accurate watch.  But here comes the above testing showing that to be the wrong statement.

A logical person would abandon the old ways and join the new.  They would not go on another forum and make up accusations that are trivially shown to be wrong.  For example, claim gets made that the engineer above doesn't even wear a watch.  All he does is look at the graphs of watches.  He shows that he not only has a watch, but multiple ones at all price points.  No matter. 

Folks start to get personal with him.  They accuse him for being in this thing for money.  They can't find any evidence of it but hey, if you make the accusation often enough, maybe it sticks.

In a direct one on one exchange, the very same folks don't have any facts to back their assertion of being able to tell how accurate a watch is based on just wearing said watch and measuring how long it takes for an apple to fall from the tree by counting under their breath.  No amount of telling them that is not accurate enough to count to fraction of a second gets them to listen.

So here we are.  We, I and literally tens of thousands of your audiophile friends try to bring more data and science/engineering to the table.  You don't like that?  No big deal.  Just don't make contrived analogies as if that will amount to anything.  

Ah, the video where you are sitting in front of all the electronic analyzers that you used to visually real time analyze the ABX signals?

There is no such video.  Stop making stuff up AJ.  I have never, ever used an analyzer when taking these blind tests

You don't even understand the nature of these tests and whether an analyzer can even help you.  Take the Archimago test.  That test relies on bit depth of content, not anything that you can analyzer with an audio measurement device.  If you don't believe me, go ahead and show the difference using said analyzer.

Why is it that you are not complaining about @kevn?  Did he or did he not pass the test of high-res vs standard not just by himself, but a few of his friends?

You are not going to answer that, are you? 

@soundfield 

Would you do a proctored one at PAF 2024? Or only doctored?

I would *love* for you to set up such a blind test for everyone who comes to your room there.  Are you going to do that and publish the results at the end?

Or is it that you don't want to alienate potential buyers of your speakers so that is the last thing you would want to do?