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Romy the Cat
Boston, MA
Posts 10,259
Joined on 05-28-2004
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6
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Post ID:
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27932
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Reply to:
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27931
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This is a very good question and I wish I know the answer. A common logic would suggest that if one Dac is better than other than it should have better options to propel me, as a listener, to whatever destination I am trying to go. However, it seems that it is not the case. If I correct in my observation, and let not to fool ourselves I might be not correct, then the difference between the DACs in the realm of the "absolute sounds" would indicate that there are effective absolute sounds and not effective absolute sounds.
If all of it is correct then the conclusion a monumental consequences. It literally suggests that there are sonic differences reach our absolutely irrelevant for listening experience as some how our brain ignores it. It does acknowledges it but those differences do not block purely musical communication.
There is another very interesting twist in all of this. In all cases of my listening I power my speakers with AmpX. It is also possible that somsung that this amplification does my dear responsible for the effect above. I have my local audio guy to whom I gave one of the version off AmpX and after 2 weeks of listening he took all his expensive high-end audio cables and dump them to storage, replacing them with plain vanilla cheap cables. With all of it he does acknowledge the cables have Sonic differences but now he feel that with AmpX so the differences become irrelevant.
In all of it my interest now is not celebrate the liberative quality of the ampX apology. My primary interest, and Dima and I spend some efforts into this direction, to discover what exactly the properties in performance of amplifier that responsible for the effect. The key, is to recognize what those properties and to see if entrenching those characteristics into any other amplifier would be possible any amplifier to act as the ampX. I literally would like to enrich my Milq some of non-sonic characteristics of the AmpX.
"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
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