IWalker
Well-known member
This thread is to continue the discussion of ego in high end audio, and measurements vs subjective impressions, etc...to prevent further hijacking of joey's LCD vs Chair thread.
The ego is definitely there. I have heard some very expensive systems that just do not bring you into the music, but yet the owners are sitting there gloating and stating I paid $10k for this, and $9k for that, and on and on. Price does not always equate to quality.
And for those component comparisons you talk about, it is usually the people that own the expensive component that will sit there and swear it sounds night and day better, when you are there thinking the sound is very close. Kind of reminds you of trips to the Audio Store - the more expensive the component, the greater the sales person puts on the pitch.
Dan
The $205 ScanSpeak driver that they use in the Wilson Sophia and Sonus Faber Cremonas measures out to be amazing... wow....
In the 30 years I've been in this hobby I have discovered their are two types of audiophile. On the one hand the guy who is into the hardware, owns 100 or so "demo records", a similar number of CD/SACD's/DVD-A's, $20k to $50k in a system that is the "best" in terms of parts but doesn't come close to sounding like real instruments playing in real spaces.
On the other hand, the guy with a boatload of music of various sources who may have also spent 20k to 50k on his system but instead of buying the latest and greatest has put together a system that plays music. The audiophile system may do any number of things better than this system but never sounds as much like music.
Both of these people have an ego investment in their systems!
As to measurements they have their place but I would never buy a component just because it measured better or cost more. A perfect case is the SET amps and a properly matched speaker. SET's measure horribly yet to this listener can sound so much more like the real thing that comparisons with equivalent conventional designs on the same speaker are laughable. Others would find the comparison to produce just the opposite effect. Preference in sound is as subjective as type of music enjoyed.
Speakers and cartridges (the transducers) are measurably the most subjective components and as such will engender the greatest arguments among audiophiles of both camps. The hardware guy wants the most expensive with the deepest bass and the most extended treble. The music guys gives up some of those things for the midrange magic of real instruments playing in real spaces.
My personal ego preference is for systems that play music as opposed to audio hijinks that impress but in the end fall short of capturing the listener into the essence of the music. YMMV
Agreed. Measurements have their place, but are not the end-all by any means. SET amps measure horribly in some ways, but very very well in others...for example, they have high overall distortion (tubes do in general, for the most part) but most of that is even order, which is much more pleasing to the ear than odd order, while most of SS amps' distortion is odd order (even though it has less overall)...creating a much more sterile sound, generally. (that's a gross generalization) So...evaluating results without full data is certainly harmful as well(but that does happen a lot).As to measurements they have their place but I would never buy a component just because it measured better or cost more. A perfect case is the SET amps and a properly matched speaker. SET's measure horribly yet to this listener can sound so much more like the real thing that comparisons with equivalent conventional designs on the same speaker are laughable. Others would find the comparison to produce just the opposite effect. Preference in sound is as subjective as type of music enjoyed.
My personal ego preference is for systems that play music as opposed to audio hijinks that impress but in the end fall short of capturing the listener into the essence of the music. YMMV
I think that you're grouping that into 2 extremes, and not everyone falls into that. You also have the middle set, who wants to build things themselves because of the value proposition...to get the best possible speaker for the money...because we value the time dedicated to a hobby as free. They generally look at measurements first, to ensure that they're getting a good quality product...and then do what they can with the top quality products, to produce the best, most natural sounding speaker they can. They/we do this, so that we can create something that just blows us away in terms of the quality of sound, and accuracy of reproduction....for our enjoyment of music. I have 2 seperate hobbies...speaker design/building...and music enjoyment. It just happens that the goal of one is to enhance the other.
Also, to make the overused car analogy...(and I'm sure jason will ream me for butchering this) ... you can have horsepower ratings, and measure all sorts of things having to do with handling and acceleration, etc...but that doesn't mean that person A is going to like Car 1 over Car 2....just because it measures better on the test equipment. Maybe they like a softer ride, etc. That also doesn't mean that you can't say that car 1 is a better car. It is better...just not for all people.
In speakers...it is measurable whether or not something is closer to the original signal or not, but there is no measure for what you like...except preference itself. My course of action is to find those drivers that perform the best in tests, and buy a sample, and build a 2 way with it...and see what I think of the sound. I know it measures well, or I wouldn't have bought it...after that...it's preference. So it's a nice middle ground between the two, with very little ego involved whatsoever. I don't need my speakers to measure "the best" nor do I need a brand name. I want a high quality product that performs well and sounds good to my ears.
An audiophile of the 2nd variety who sits down and says "WOW, this sounds GREAT", when they listen to a speaker with horrible frequency response and/or high distortion, is fine to like that speaker...it's his/her taste. But that doesn't change the fact that it has high distortion or horrible frequency response...which are NOT part of an accurate reproduction of the recording. Distortion artifacts are induced noise. Some people like hamburgers better than filet mignon...but it is generally understood that filet is the better piece of beef. If that noise existed in the original recording...it would have been recorded as such...and would already be present...not needing to be simulated through the speaker.
I'll tell you my personal views on what I see in subjective/measured performance. I feel I am not in the majority with my views but I doubt I'm alone with them either I won't be afraid to offend anyone because people seem to pass over my posts all the time anyway
I am a very scientifically minded person and thus, place quite a bit of faith in measured performance. That being said, I still do not think the full set of tools exist to turn measured results into 100% predictable subjective results.
I am a Solid-state kind of guy. SETs CAN measure well, but I could not live with a poor-measuring component because I would feel that I would just be lying to myself if I said it sounded terrific.
The other consideration I have with audio is of course cost. Diminishing returns is a real thing, and paying 3x more for what I perceive as some minuscule change is crazy...... if I had unlimited funds however......
Then there is the placebo effect. If anyone doubts its existence in audiophile-land is just kidding themselves. Quite often I find things sounding better....because they are supposed to..... or because they look awesome.
To sum up, when dealing with audio and the quest for The Absolute Sound, we are dealing with the Human brain. When it comes to the brain, even though we have learned a lot about how it works..... we still have no idea what's REALLY going on up there
The DIYer is in a different category all together and is one that I have had very few dealings with. I would still group them with the 2nd group as having the ne plus ultra of commercially available speakers is not their goal, but musical enjoyment at a great value is.
Better is a subjective qualification, a Funny Car can have 3000HP on tap but that doesn't make it better than a Rolls Royce for driving around town. The use of an item determines its fitness IMO.
Absolutely, but have you ever built a speaker with great measuring drivers that just didn't sound good? Measurements are a starting point for good sound but not the end point necessarily. There seems to be things in this field that we cannot measure or more correctly, correlate with sound quality.
Ah!, the argument between accuracy and musicality. Can you have both? Yeah, but in my experience it isn't cheap, nor is it always so clear cut. I'm not referring to grossly distorted products but those that are within the realm of acceptable objective performance. Again, subjectively we agree that products need to meet a certain level of performance but for me I will always err on the side of musical magic over accuracy. Both would be nice but as in any complex system, compromises must be made.
. . . but I could not live with a poor-measuring component because I would feel that I would just be lying to myself if I said it sounded terrific.
I have no idea why people believe that measured performance has anything to do with how a product sounds. Only your ears can tell you how a product sounds, and they will rarely lie to you. Measurements give you an ability to compare aspects of various products, but really tell you very little about how those products will sound.
The $205 ScanSpeak driver that they use in the Wilson Sophia and Sonus Faber Cremonas measures out to be amazing... wow....
I have no idea why people believe that measured performance has anything to do with how a product sounds. Only your ears can tell you how a product sounds, and they will rarely lie to you. Measurements give you an ability to compare aspects of various products, but really tell you very little about how those products will sound.
Measurements do tell you a lot about how a driver will sound. It may not be the final word on it...but there are a lot of measurements that aren't just frequency response measurements. For example, a CSD graph will give you an idea of how "fast" a driver's transient response is. Higher harmonic distortion will give a brighter sound, etc.
Also, if I have a speaker that's exciting to listen to, because it measures badly...I obviously don't like the way the music sounded initially, because I'd rather hear it another way. That's a preference...but I don't think most people would stand up and say "my system sound great because it accentuates the highs and has a serious midbass null" they say "wow, this sounds just like I'm THERE!" And if it really does sound like you're there, it first and foremost needs to measure well. Otherwise you're hearing a lot of stuff that isn't, and never was "there."
My reasoning is that we know certain distortion levels and types add information to the analog signal, and rarely subtract anything. I just have a personal belief that I want my equipment to add as little as possible to the signal it is fed. When someone says "even order harmonic distortion is pleasing to the ear" I think to myself; that's fine, if the recording is heavy in even order distortion, which I doubt is very common.
All of this is personal preference of course
My reasoning is that we know certain distortion levels and types add information to the analog signal, and rarely subtract anything. I just have a personal belief that I want my equipment to add as little as possible to the signal it is fed. When someone says "even order harmonic distortion is pleasing to the ear" I think to myself; that's fine, if the recording is heavy in even order distortion, which I doubt is very common.
All of this is personal preference of course
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