How Has Your Finely Tuned Audiophile Dexterity Helped You in Your "Other" Life?


Listening. Observing. Trying. Failing. Perceiving the nuances. And, sledge hammer impacts. Developing a new vocubulary. (As well as using very familiar terms when things don’t go as expected), Sorting through tons of data. Skillfully differentiating between the things that matter, and things that don’t. To us, anyway.

So, how have these skills (and, being a generally good person) helped you in life? Or, others?

Here’s one to start:

Wine Pouring:

My wife and I like to drink wine. Landing a enjoyable wine in the single digits (after all discounts applied) is a big win for us. Our evening of wine allocation and enjoyment generally takes on the following cadence: Pour One. Pour two (making sure to save just a little in the bottle). Then, the highly anticipated "desperation pour". The last 2 sips for each poured from the bottle. This way we take a pause, and take the time to fully appreciate those last two sips. Silly, but it’s what we do.

Frankly, I’ve gotten pretty good at this wine allocation thing. Equal pours, every time. For a while there, I thought I was just "lucky" and timed it just right. But, recently, I’ve concluded it’s something more. My "finely tuned audiophile" dexterity.

As we have all observed, when you fill a vessel with liquid, the frequency of the sound changes as the space in the vessel becomes occupied with more liquid. I was unaware that I was paying attention to those frequencies and my brain remembered the frequency at the conclusion of the last pour. So, when filling the second glass, I just listened and stopped when the frequency of the last pour was matched. Seems to work for me (within a tolerance of a few Hz/Mls). This doens’t help when you’re camping in near darkness and miss the glass completely, but has worked for us in a workable domestic sense for quite some time. Now I thank Sal Marantz, Frank McIntosh, and others after those (nearly) perfect pours.

128x128waytoomuchstuff

@rockadanny

Yeah, I get it. I attended a music program at a large church last Christmas. A few seconds into the performance, I had a strong desire to rent some scaffording and rip out all the cheap "builder grade" speaker wire and replace it with "good stuff". Everyone around me was smiling, and singing along. I found that singing loudly helped the situation.

But..... on the other hand, when they DO get it "right" at a music venue, I’m the happiest guy in the room, filled with joy, gratitude, and appreciation for all who made it happen.

So, that’s the "tariff" for being an audio nurd?

@theflattire 

Well, there you go.  That's something worth sharing.  "Others" probably benefit from your new skillset as well, I'll bet.

Okay, here’s another one. Hot rodding:

I have an older car with solid lifters connected to the camshaft. The car sounded like a Singer sewing machine running down the road at high RPM from the driver’s position. Audiophiles use a product called "Acoustical Magic" to dampening the ringing on turntable platters, and I had a can of it laying around. Since my valve cover (yes, one in case) was made of aluminum, I thought: "Why not?" So, I cleaned up the inside, de-greased it, applied the magic stuff, baked it in the oven for several hours, let it cool, and reinstalled.

It truly was "magic." Now I hear the exhaust, and the wind. A definitely upgrade in the "SQ" of my ride.

@waytoomuchstuff ...

I found that singing loudly helped the situation.

Ha! Hadn’t thought of trying that. But if I start singing, then EVERYONE will leave! 🤣

Hasn't helped one bit.

No audio club where I live.

All of my family and normal friends think it's weird.

My four music buff friends get it, but only one is willing to spend serious coin and effort with setup to "get there".

My wife has to remind me most people just don't care how good or bad music sounds, it's just background noise.

I've learned the hard way unless a guest requests to listen to my system (almost never) they will not get excited about how it sounds.

I have exactly one friend like me who is willing to cut expenses in other areas in order to have the best gear he can afford.

I'm envious of people who live in a city large enough to have an audio club, and access to audio shows.

As much as I love this since hobby (since age 15) I can't fathom why more people don't embrace it like I do.