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In Reply to: RE: The MAD HATTER tea party!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! posted by TomWh on March 10, 2017 at 13:26:40
"There is 11% where maybe some of Dennis ideas may have some merit. OK when they try to explain why is as bad as you saying it can't. "
If the theory behind Dennis' explanations are provably wrong I see no reason not to correct Dennis.
Someone, with a small knowledge base, might read Dennis' stuff and get very confused. Start following that false path and never get back on track.
That person might be the one that would have come up with some real answers to the things we don't already understand but can't because he listened to Dennis' BS and never made it back to reality.
I can give you many examples of things that Dennis has said that are just plan wrong and makes me think he has no idea of how audio electronics work.
Every time I think "there's no way Dennis could say anything more ignorant" he makes another post and proves me wrong.
What would you have me do? Just keep my mouth shut and let false statements stand?
We don't know everything but we do know what we know.
Just down this thread Dennis said, "It's because that bandwidth encompasses many different
bandwidths, all happening both at once, and in different
time references simultaneously. What is desired is a wire
that doesn't delay musical transient "A" while trying to
pass musical transient "B" at the same time....."
It sounds to me as if Dennis thinks a musical signal is more than one signal with 2 (or more) different peaks at the same time.
Here's one of the things that we do know,
Quoting myself, "Even though the signal in the wire of an audio amplifier is made up of many different signals, they have been mixed together and have become one composite signal.
At any given moment the amplitude of that signal is singular."
Or how about the time when Dennis said (while posting about the current in a SET output tube who's peak current is 120ma.) there are "hundreds of amps" of current flowing within that 120ma. envelope.
Again, to me, this just shows Dennis' lack of understand and I see no reason to just let false statements like that stand without being challenged.
Do you?
We all can think whatever we want and say whatever we want but when something is said that is totally wrong I have the right to correct it.
Does that make me the bad guy?
In the end, how a person responds the sound coming out of the speaker is subjective but how electrons behave in wire (or a tube, or a transformer....etc...) is not subjective but a matter of physics.
BTW I think saying 11% is unknown is way off base. maybe 1%, maybe less.
Tre'
Have Fun and Enjoy the Music
"Still Working the Problem"
Follow Ups:
Hi Tre'You are not the bad guy. Dennis and Jeff like to WAG lots of things. The only reason I posted at all is the blind test show me on paper guys assume that there are not people who hear and feel music. And the numbers do not always match.
There are the number guys who say they can not hear the differences in caps. Shit you would have to be tone deaf not to pick that up. Wire is not as drastic. If 2 inches where a big deal I would guess out of the mc cart.
On the let's listen to the experts front we just had all the number guys tell us what pieces of crap interstage transformers are. Bandwidth/phase shift etc... You would be crazy to use them in a phono stage. You think I have not built lots and lots of phono stages with all the math approved parts. Well I am not selling interstages and a resistor and cap can be a lot cheaper but how about when we drop the cart on the lp.
The main point which is always lost, in this endless debate, is does it sound like real music out of the speaker. Music is my passion not math and graphs. Go to the audio shows and listen to the crap people are buying, that should tell you how many people can hear or care.
On the 1% front, infinity might be larger than you think???
Enjoy the ride
Tom
Edits: 03/10/17
Following the math, every time I modify my system to lower the distortion (without resorting to FB) it sounds more like real instruments.
I've been singing and playing since I was a kid.
As a young man I was in bands and live sound was always my department.
Later mixing local bands filled part of my time.
I've been building my own electronics (both home stereo and studio gear) for decades.
I worked in professional studios for 11 years and spent time on the road with a national act mixing front of house.
"Music is my passion" and the math helps me get there.
Tre'
Have Fun and Enjoy the Music
"Still Working the Problem"
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