In Reply to: Oh, brother, it's getting deep around here posted by geoffkait on November 17, 2022 at 09:44:21:
"Because systems can sometimes have errors and peoples' listening skills are often unreliable, negative results of a test for directionality are meaningless."
It is the exact same reason to be skeptical of positive results, or if you really believe in cable directionality, the ability of a manufacturer to deliver the products to the customer consistently without any case of somehow confusing the customer into installing them backwards.... mislabelled cable direction indicator per manufacturing defect as an example.
"Meaningful results start to emerge after many tests on many systems with many test subjects. Repeatability and transferability are the key."
There seems to be some logical flaw in the following line of reasoning: "listening skills are often unreliable", and yet the proposed method of detecting the effect, ie (paraphrasing) "just listen myself and see if I like one direction better than the other".
There are at least two conductors per interconnect per channel. However the only thing most of us would consider practical is multistrand not solid core. That is a ton of book keeping just to get one cable built correctly with out any mistakes. It's hard to imagine how all this overhead wouldn't be prohibitively expensive for a boutique audiophile manufacturer to control. And really begs the question why bother doing the listening test on any old manufacturers multistrand cables with presumably random distributions of strands within the multistrand bundles pointing in one direction or the other.
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors:
Follow Ups
- RE: Oh, brother, it's getting deep around here - Ugly 09:45:30 11/19/22 (1)
- Negative vs positive results - geoffkait 15:52:44 11/19/22 (0)