It is true that some audiophiles believe in something other than science, which is fine. However, I don't think any of the manufacturers feel that way. I'm sure they don't just stumble upon something and say "hey this sounds great" and sell it. It probably does happen that way but 99.99999% of the time it doesn't.
May some may disagree, but if it sounds different b/w two tweaks or components then the actual sound wave being generated by the speaker is different. If the sound wave is different a high-end transducer (mic) can pick that up and record it. It is that simple.
Magic doesn't exist except on stages in Vegas.
If nothing more than serving my own purpose, I think the data should exist and be available to the public.
People fret on this board about picoseconds of jitter but then ignore other data. It is all very odd to me.
May some may disagree, but if it sounds different b/w two tweaks or components then the actual sound wave being generated by the speaker is different. If the sound wave is different a high-end transducer (mic) can pick that up and record it. It is that simple.
Magic doesn't exist except on stages in Vegas.
If nothing more than serving my own purpose, I think the data should exist and be available to the public.
People fret on this board about picoseconds of jitter but then ignore other data. It is all very odd to me.