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In Reply to: RE: Alternative stands for SMGa's? posted by FX35 on September 05, 2020 at 17:49:01
He did. Did you ever learn anything about how electronics work? You obviously don't know anything about it now, if you ever did.
Follow Ups:
"Did you ever learn anything about how electronics work? You obviously don't know anything about it now, if you ever did."
It's easy to toss insults around. What might not be easy is to identify an amp if you didn't know which one is being used.
"Everything else is just noise".
"He did" So he listened to amps with the same output figures and concluded that they all sounded the same? well, doesn't that make things easy! just buy the cheapest amp that has the output you need and you're done!!! they all sound the same anyway........ what a joke! and you actually believe that crap?
"Did you ever learn anything about how electronics work?" This may shock you, but you don't have to study for years to find out how a amp sounds, they have a little switch, switch it to "ON", sit back and listen...... its that easy.
FWIW, I've heard dozens of amps, SS, tubes, hybrids, Class A, AB, B, D, monos, stereos......... and guess what? no 2 sound the same! But you must be the expert on amps, with a "crap" HH Scott 350R and a Rotel RS 913........ very impressive
Riiiight. Cuz it's majik.
Back to your cave, Troll
Well, it's actually NOT magic, you just can't measure or explain every aspect of how the brain processes sound waves through the human hearing system. This debate has been going on for years, the tech/spec camp says "If everything measures the same, it must sound the same", but experienced audiophiles all agree that despite identical specs and measurements, audio electronics and cables from various manufacturers all have their own sonic signature. Why do you think most High-End manufacturers choose critical components by ear in the final production stages?.........because machines can not measure the complexity of human reactions to sound waves.
So........ if you consider the fact that hearing is inconsistent between humans (just like taste and recognition of colors)and that critical component selection is made by designers on personal preferences, you might begin to understand why all amps and cables vary in audio reproduction.
You're not the first one to react like this, but that's OK, I've met plenty like you, little to no experience in High-End, listening to practically the same low-fi system their whole life, read a few books, maybe even studied electronics for a while, and then they know it all!
If anyone has been in a cave, it's you.
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