Some thoughts on ASR and the reviews


I’ve briefly taken a look at some online reviews for budget Tekton speakers from ASR and Youtube. Both are based on Klippel quasi-anechoic measurements to achieve "in-room" simulations.

As an amateur speaker designer, and lover of graphs and data I have some thoughts. I mostly hope this helps the entire A’gon community get a little more perspective into how a speaker builder would think about the data.

Of course, I’ve only skimmed the data I’ve seen, I’m no expert, and have no eyes or ears on actual Tekton speakers. Please take this as purely an academic exercise based on limited and incomplete knowledge.

1. Speaker pricing.

One ASR review spends an amazing amount of time and effort analyzing the ~$800 US Tekton M-Lore. That price compares very favorably with a full Seas A26 kit from Madisound, around $1,700. I mean, not sure these inexpensive speakers deserve quite the nit-picking done here.

2. Measuring mid-woofers is hard.

The standard practice for analyzing speakers is called "quasi-anechoic." That is, we pretend to do so in a room free of reflections or boundaries. You do this with very close measurements (within 1/2") of the components, blended together. There are a couple of ways this can be incomplete though.

a - Midwoofers measure much worse this way than in a truly anechoic room. The 7" Scanspeak Revelators are good examples of this. The close mic response is deceptively bad but the 1m in-room measurements smooth out a lot of problems. If you took the close-mic measurements (as seen in the spec sheet) as correct you’d make the wrong crossover.

b - Baffle step - As popularized and researched by the late, great Jeff Bagby, the effects of the baffle on the output need to be included in any whole speaker/room simulation, which of course also means the speaker should have this built in when it is not a near-wall speaker. I don’t know enough about the Klippel simulation, but if this is not included you’ll get a bass-lite expereinced compared to real life. The effects of baffle compensation is to have more bass, but an overall lower sensitivity rating.

For both of those reasons, an actual in-room measurement is critical to assessing actual speaker behavior. We may not all have the same room, but this is a great way to see the actual mid-woofer response as well as the effects of any baffle step compensation.

Looking at the quasi anechoic measurements done by ASR and Erin it _seems_ that these speakers are not compensated, which may be OK if close-wall placement is expected.

In either event, you really want to see the actual in-room response, not just the simulated response before passing judgement. If I had to critique based strictly on the measurements and simulations, I’d 100% wonder if a better design wouldn’t be to trade sensitivity for more bass, and the in-room response would tell me that.

3. Crossover point and dispersion

One of the most important choices a speaker designer has is picking the -3 or -6 dB point for the high and low pass filters. A lot of things have to be balanced and traded off, including cost of crossover parts.

Both of the reviews, above, seem to imply a crossover point that is too high for a smooth transition from the woofer to the tweeters. No speaker can avoid rolling off the treble as you go off-axis, but the best at this do so very evenly. This gives the best off-axis performance and offers up great imaging and wide sweet spots. You’d think this was a budget speaker problem, but it is not. Look at reviews for B&W’s D series speakers, and many Focal models as examples of expensive, well received speakers that don’t excel at this.

Speakers which DO typically excel here include Revel and Magico. This is by no means a story that you should buy Revel because B&W sucks, at all. Buy what you like. I’m just pointing out that this limited dispersion problem is not at all unique to Tekton. And in fact many other Tekton speakers don’t suffer this particular set of challenges.

In the case of the M-Lore, the tweeter has really amazingly good dynamic range. If I was the designer I’d definitely want to ask if I could lower the crossover 1 kHz, which would give up a little power handling but improve the off-axis response.  One big reason not to is crossover costs.  I may have to add more parts to flatten the tweeter response well enough to extend it's useful range.  In other words, a higher crossover point may hide tweeter deficiencies.  Again, Tekton is NOT alone if they did this calculus.

I’ve probably made a lot of omissions here, but I hope this helps readers think about speaker performance and costs in a more complete manner. The listening tests always matter more than the measurements, so finding reviewers with trustworthy ears is really more important than taste-makers who let the tools, which may not be properly used, judge the experience.

erik_squires

Showing 31 responses by amir_asr

Because you "have been measuring" while Nelson and Viktor built tons of gear people love, buy and keep for years. For some reason I trust their engineering chops more than yours. Why is that?

Why do you trust anyone?  You are buying a product, not the person.  It is not like Nelson is going to come to your house with that amplifier.  He has built a product that competes with thousands of others.  He doesn't provide an ounce of reliable information as to why his amplifiers are better sounding.  He wants you to believe that they do and you do.  Countless fellow audiophiles are yours who read ASR want reliable information and measurements give that to them.  They also want to learn the underlying science and engineering which again, ASR provides.

In contrast, you seem to be wanting people to buy products just because of someone's reputation.  Which you are welcome to do but then don't ask me to tell you who you are.

Why are you even here?

You are in a thread that is specifically about ASR and how a company attempted to shut down my evaluation of their product and that of another reviewer.  Instead of commenting on that and defending the right of free press, some of you have drifted into misinformation and insults about me and work I do.  So once in a while I answer when I get a notification about this thread and me being mentioned. 

BTW, in your personal gear you list Levinson and not your "top measuring" gear. Why is that? How do they say at MSFT? Eat your own dogfood? Oh and what were great achievement of "Digital Media" at Microsoft? Like... none? Refusal to support lossless perhaps? Inability to even make a decent media player? 

On your first question, I bought a great system some 15 years ago before I started measuring anything.  The most important part of my system is Revel Salon 2 speakers.  When John Atkinson of Stereophile was asked which speaker he likes after hundreds he had tested, he said Revel Salon 2, mentioning that "he almost cried when he had to return them."

My DAC has since been upgraded from Mark Levinson to Topping.

The amplifiers remain Mark Levinson. They produce 500 watts into 8 ohm and nearly twice as much into 4 ohm.  I need the power to drive the rather insensitive Salon 2 and other speakers I test.  Had I not own them, I would not buy them however and instead, would get a Hypex based amplifier.

Finally, on Microsoft, products my team designed have shipped in billions of products and I don't just mean Windows.  Whenever you watch video and your bandwidth drops and so does the fidelity of the stream, that is technology we invented in the company we sold to Microsoft to adapt stream quality to bandwidth.  We were pioneers in streaming, for which, I was proud to receive the 3rd Emmy award for technologies developed in my team:

 

 

Any more off-topic comments you have that you want me to address?

I’ve briefly taken a look at some online reviews for budget Tekton speakers from ASR and Youtube. Both are based on Klippel quasi-anechoic measurements to achieve "in-room" simulations.

Your intro is incorrect. Klippel Near-field scanner produces full anechoic measurements of the speaker. It is not at all "quasi." In my testing, it uses over 1000 measurement points to then solve the radiation patter of the speaker. In addition, it makes a secondary set of scans which using phase analysis, allows it to extract all effects of the room reflections. The output then is fully anechoic down to lowest frequencies -- something you can’t even do with any realistic anechoic chamber (most stop being anechoic below 80 Hz or so). There is a reason the equipment costs $100K.

 

b - Baffle step - As popularized and researched by the late, great Jeff Bagby, the effects of the baffle on the output need to be included in any whole speaker/room simulation, which of course also means the speaker should have this built in when it is not a near-wall speaker. I don’t know enough about the Klippel simulation, but if this is not included you’ll get a bass-lite expereinced compared to real life. The effects of baffle compensation is to have more bass, but an overall lower sensitivity rating.

As I explained above, Klippel NFS fully computes the 3-D sounfield of a speaker.  It does NOT suffer from baffle step issues you mention.  Stereophile measurements though, have this error and hence the reason you routinely see a false bass hump in their frequency response graphs.

Please watch this tutorial video to get proper understanding of ASR speaker measurements:

 

The ASR crowd was probably never much of a market for his speakers, and as we can see here, lots of people are not very impressed with the way ASR does reviews.

That is a misstatement.  Tekton advertises the M-Lore has having very linear (flat) response which would definitely appeal to ASR membership:

 

Problem is that it doesn't deliver on that:

 

But you are right that if Eric Alexander had stuck to the story that measurements don't matter, all would be well. Instead, he complained about the measurements so here we are.

One ASR review spends an amazing amount of time and effort analyzing the ~$800 US Tekton M-Lore. That price compares very favorably with a full Seas A26 kit from Madisound, around $1,700. I mean, not sure these inexpensive speakers deserve quite the nit-picking done here.

There is no attempt at "nit-picking."  You can't analyze a speaker properly without the full suite of measurements I show from various frequency responses to distortion and directivity.  Only then you have a picture of a speaker performance and can compare it to others.

Believe me, I would love to take shortcuts given how much work it is to test a speaker but I can't.

Running the same set of measurements also eliminates the accusation of bias.  Everything is tested the same way regardless of who makes it, how much it costs, etc.

Finally, $800 is fair bit of money for a speaker.  Even if i were inclined to reduce the number of test, it would be for something far cheaper.

But I agree regarding the culture over at ASR and Amir.  He came into the Roon forum to debate Michal Jurewicz from Mytek.  Some of the other members became involved and Amir was quite arrogant and condescending.

Far more people appreciated my posts than anything from Michal.  He would keep repeating the same marketing stories without a single fact backing them.  I was impressed to see Roon members not appreciate that and valuing specific data, references, etc. that demonstrated his claims to be wrong. 

"Arrogance" in my view is claiming something and demanding to be believed.  I never do that.

I just don’t see the value in a site that constantly throws shade on high end gear. IMHO

I have no such position on high-end gear. My speakers alone cost $25,000 a pair. Give me the performance and you can charge whatever you want. Give me poor performance and charge a lot of money and we show data to demonstrate that. The choice is that of manufacturer.

Now, if you value status and marketing of audio products more than fidelity, then sure, we are at odds with your goals.

I think that ASR has chosen an extreme stance not for any particular reason except to incite an even greater amount of tribalism in this hobby.

Nope.  The "stance" I have taken is follow proper science and engineering.  This uses to be the norm in 1970s and 1980s.  Sometime later, folks started to abandoned this and instead, started to tell stories about products.  Audiophiles bought them and this allowed the market to deliver all manner of products that when tested, don't seem to perform.  Instead of doing their best to produce high fidelity gear, a lot of audio companies rely completely on marketing and informercials pretending to be reviews.

As consumers, you need to be more critical and ask for proof.  Don't equate expense with fidelity.  That equation has long been thrown out the door.

 

1. How does a given measurement translate into something I might be able to hear (or perceive), and what words would I use for the subjective experience?

At the risk of stating the obvious, frequency response variations of a speaker are pretty audible.  Too much bass would bring boominess.  Too much treble would sound bright.  Midrange can cause vocals to become forward or recessed.

Traditional frequency response measurements only showed direct/on-axis sound.  Across some 40 years of research, we have learned that reflections (off-axis) sounds contribute to the tonality that we hear and hence, also help set preference.  As such, we want to see speakers that have off-axis response that is similar to on axis.  A standardized set of measurement axis exist that makes such analysis easier (so called CEA/CTA-2034). 

Measurements can also tell you optimal listening angles, both vertically and horizontally.

Further, the beam width or amount of spread you get at mid to high frequencies can predict whether the soundstage will be more diffused and wider, or more pinpoint.  

Harder to assess are distortion measurements although all else being equal, you do want a speaker with less distortion.  Ultimately though, I use my ear to determine the level of impairment here with specialized music tracks that stress speakers, especially in bass and sub-bass where they have most distortion.

Finally, things like impedance measurement together with speaker sensitivity tell us how easy it is to drive the speaker, how much power you may need, etc.

All in all, speaker measurements are about 70 to 80% instructive.  As such, I recommend using them to weed out the bad products and create a short list to listen and select from.  We do however have many who buy by measurements alone and have had great success.

The problem I have with ASR and its followers is the routine contempt heaped on anyone with a different POV from ASR gospel. 

We are not a church and don't have gospel.  We follow establish audio science and engineering.  And rely on what we can prove.

If you say there are qualities in a speaker wire that can't be measured, then we are at odds with each other.  This violates both factors above.

Contrary to claims of people, we hugely value listening tests.  We just ask that they be bias controlled for the same reasons.  This means anecdotal statements that this and that sounds better to your "ear" while you had your eyes wide open, don't get a positive reception.

Mind you, you can have all of these views and be just fine in ASR.  We have plenty of subjectivists that way.  The issue comes up is when you take on the membership and try to tell them how it is done.  Naturally you get strong pushback. But that is something you are bringing onto yourself.

For one ASR imo has no credibility ,there are tons of youngsters that know -0 about real time experiences ,and the way they measure.

I suspect the feeling is mutual.  BTW, I am older than many of you .  While I appreciate being called "youngster," I got my degree in early 1980s....

a perfect example I had mentioned for the money how good the Denafrips Terminator 2 dac was for the money ,and they are giving a comparison just how much better the $800 Topping measured , sonically the Denafrips is light years better sounding, and I ripped into them and all their childish antics . Myself have been an Audiophile-over 40 years and travel and listen to a lot-of gear ,and having-owned a audio store for a decade I have a pretty good grasp on sonics and reality .

If in all of those 40 years, you had spent just one day doing a listening test blind, you would have been so much better off from that moment on.  But no, you allowed your eyes and brain to interfere.  And with it, arrived at the wrong conclusion, leading to wasting money left and right on things like that Denafrips DAC.

As to having an audio store, a friend of mine (older than you) co-founded *the* high-end audio store(s) in this area.  He sold his shares all of a sudden and I asked why.  He said his conscious wouldn't allow him to keep selling things that he knew had no merit audibly.  

I used to buy gear from their stores.  They would always try to sell me cables at the end of the transaction.  I would always tell them that I would take the cables if they were free.  They would immediately discount the cost of the equipment by that amount and give me the cables then for nothing!  That is how I have collected a full suite of Transparent Audio Cables.

Don't get me started on ASR...

Just as one example of their flawed way of evaluating gear:

They reviewed one GR Research's budget stand mount speakers, but all they did was measure it and listen to one speaker.

Oh you mean this "giant" disaster of a speaker?  

That little 4 inch surplus woofer Danny is using produced the most horrible sound possible.  Naturally due to its extremely small size and lack of excursion.  To call that a hi-fi speaker would be a huge stretch.  To call it Little Giant Killer is science fiction.

As to mono listening you better start doing that as that is the most sensitive type of speaker testing you can do.  I have a video on that:

 

As if things like: imaging, soundstage, ambience retrieval don't exist. 

If a speaker is colored, or distorts like hell, I wouldn't care about those factors.  That aside, much of what you talk about is in the content and has little to do with the speaker itself.  Pan an instrument to the left.  Even the crappiest speaker will demonstrate that.  Spatial effects are also quite obvious in mono listening.

"I suppose I do not get the point of this thread. Once a speaker is placed and set up in a typical listening room, all bets are off, no matter what measurements were used in the design of them."

Above transition frequencies of a few hundred hertz, speaker dominates.  Yes, there are secondary such as reflections but we have a good model to represent them in measurements as well.  See this standard CEA-2034 measurement in every speaker review I do:

 

 

We can even predict the response with decent accuracy in a room:

In bass domain, the room dominates almost independent of the speaker.  So there, you must have a strategy for dealing with room modes, again, independent of what speaker you use.

"Is the amp class A or A/B, how many watts in class a?

It is well proven that components that have measured bad sound very good and vice versa. This goes for this guys measurements and stereophiles. 
Your ears are the best instruments to use when evaluating audio components."

It doesn't matter what class an amplifier is. It is all in the implemention/engineering.

And no, it is not remotely proven that badly measuring devices sound better.  At best, they sound the same if the impairments are not bad enough for listening to hear.  

Your ears can be very useful in assessing fidelity but not when you involve your other senses such as eyes, and sources of bias.  Even when there are provable, audible differences, these sources of bias dominate outcome of listening tests.  Without controlled testing, you are just generating noise, not data.

And what if you can't listen to the device?  Those of us who know the power of measurements, can easily deal with this.  Those that don't, miss out on great audio gear.

I’m not arguing this at all. I’m just saying that, by definition, it’s quasi. :) The results may be better than anechoic, but the measurements are considered quasi.  We are estimating an anechoic response even though the measurements themselves were not done in an anechoic environment.

Nope.  There is no "estimation" going on.  Klippel NFS makes dual scans separated by fixed distance.  This allows it to then detect the direct sound vs reflected sound due to phase differential.  The reflections are then filtered computationally.  This is what makes it superior to anechoic chambers which lose that characteristics at lower frequencies.  There is nothing "pseudo" about that.

Gated measurements are called "pseudo" because they lack low frequency resolution.  That makes them an estimate that is good at mid to high frequencies but not bass.  Klippel NFS solves this problem (and with higher SNR to boot).

"Fortunately for low frequencies we have ground plane measurements, which I believe are actually anechoic... but I’ll leave that to the scientists to debate. :-)"

Ground plane measurements have sources of error.  And require stitching to the gated measurements which again, can introduce errors. 

To be sure, you can get really good results with ground plane+gated measurements but it is very tedious.  See this post from our resident expert in that field: 

 

Many of us aren’t arguing the measurements. I’m arguing that Amir and ASR have a toxic culture that permeates other audio forums with condescending tones that have been normalized and promoted at ASR.

There is absolutely nothing toxic about ASR culture.  We thrive on information and knowledge about audio products, engineering and research.  If you walk in dismissive of all that, then you will get strong pushback.  It is no different than going to your doctor, claiming to know more than him because you know your body and he doesn't.  Most doctors would throw you out of their office if you said that.  The toxicity then, is yours, not ours or your doctors.

Many days we celebrate on ASR for discovering something new.  Latest example is a DIY speaker that blew us away in its performance despite its very low cost:

The speaker not only measured great, it sounded great in my listening tests.  There is nothing but happiness as a result of this.  Someone like you coming in to pick a fight is not what we are about.  But if you engage us that way, as I mentioned in the above post, we will hand your hat to you.  Not because we shout louder but because we have the research and data on our side. If that is cause for unhappiness, then don't visit ASR.

"Just look at his image on the ASR site. A Geisha with a sneer. His intent is pretty clear with that alone."

That is no geisha.  She is a gorgeous bride getting married at a Shinto shrine in Ueno park in Tokyo:

Different couples get married every half hour there.  They put them through stock poses which is boring.  I waited for the break between pictures to capture this lovely picture of hers.  

There was no intention behind picking this picture for my Avatar other than this being one of the prized images in my photography portfolio.  It shows beauty, culture and tradition.  There is zero negativity in it much less what you are reading into it.

My intent on ASR is to bring reliable facts and data into the conversation about audio fidelity.  Many love that as evidenced by massive growth of ASR in such a short period of time.  Naturally, if your views are based on anecdotes, and stuff you have read online, and you are library of audio research and engineering is empty, you are going to see them opposed.  You are welcome to stick to your opinion but don't go making stuff up like you did above.  You get your hat handed to you that way. 😁

 

Then Amir, please reciprocate.

Amir has an opinion like anyone else.  He wraps that opinion in some pretty paper that he calls science.  His weak minded followers seem to overlook his lack of credentials and his inaccurate metrology methods.

Weak minded?  Is that the level of respect you have for your fellow audiophiles?  They better think like you or they are not worthy?


As to my background, it is in my signature on ASR: 

Pretty sure that makes me qualified to test audio gear.  Go ahead and link to the background of any subjective reviewer who you think a) has designed audio gear and b) is more qualified than me.

 

Go back to your own house and find some peace.

I am at peace.  But seemingly you all are not creating threads like this, specifically discussing ASR: "Some thoughts on ASR and the reviews"

So here I am correcting the incorrect things you say about ASR. Surely I should be able to do that. 

On your way out, tell everybody here why you were banned from every audio forum out there. 

I would if there were any truth to your statement.  Do you not consider this site an "audio forum?"  

 

Amir gets on and takes a somewhat radical position because it is not effective to be balanced. 

There is nothing radical about following science and engineering knowledge and data to determine fidelity of audio gear.  What is radical is throwing all of that out of the window and opining based on anecdotal and inaccurate personal listening tests.

In addition, when I measure something, the data speaks for itself.  There is little of "me" involved in that.

 

 I dont believe that anyone actually believes that all sonic attributes can be measured.

In all cases we can measure what comes out of your audio gear.  What to do with that data depends on what is being tested.  Take cables.  When basic engineering says they don't make a difference, and we measure and show that nothing remotely has changed that is coming out of your amplifier, then that is that.  It is impossible for there to be a sonic effect when the waveforms have not changed. 

When people don't believe that, I have done null tests with music showing that the difference between cables is zero, audibly and objectively.

Change that to speakers and there is room for subjective evaluation.  Same with headphones.  This why I listen to all of these devices when I review them.  The listening tests are formal though and not random audiophile listening.

Put another way, what we do is use multiple vectors to determine fidelity of gear.  We use measurements as data point.  Add to it psychoacoustics and engineering knowledge and if needed listening.  We then combine these to have a high confidence opinion of a product.

In contrast, there is zero value in a reviewer listening to an amplifier and opining about imaging this, tight bass that.  These are all made up notions and believing them is the closest you can come in audio to running with myths.

I truly dont care how others spend their money and certainly dont have the hubris to believe that I could know any motivations.

I don't either. This is why I have tested and recommended very expensive gear such as this Mola Mola DAC:

It costs nearly $12,000.  Doesn't matter to me.  What matters is that it is superbly engineered.

Back to motivation, you seem so comfortable to guess mine per what I quoted above so i suggest you are what you say others should not be.

Measurements will tell you nothing how a speaker will sound in your room, using your equipment, and what kind of music you listen too.

Countless formal listening tests looking at correlations between listening tests and specific set of measurements which I perform say you are wrong.

It’s been proven that some of the best sounding gear measures bad and vice versa.

This has been claimed but never shown to be true in any controlled test. Just because people keep repeating this argument doesn’t make it true. In my own experience, I either don’t hear the artifacts from poorly measuring gear or hear them as degrading fidelity. Not one time have I heard distortion and noise to be good.

I attend many audio shows and I get a feel on how the speaker will sound. If I feel these speakers will sound good in my room with my system, then I will work with the dealer or manufacturer for a 30 day trial.

I have listened to hundreds of systems at audio shows. The main thing you can learn there is how dynamic a speaker can play. Otherwise, tonality will be difficult to perceive. Home trials are pain in the neck because of size and heft of speakers to schlep or ship back and forth. Best to look at measurements and rule out the bad designs and then pick from the good ones.

 

 

 

  This Amir person (I have no idea who he is) is a gifted linguist and deploys semantics rather artfully.

No one has ever complimented me on my linguistic skills!  So thank you for that.  As to who I am, it is in my signature on every post at ASR:

Feel free to challenge me on anything science related.  Happy to provide as much detail as you can handle.  :)

Well, I just watched pieces of few ASR videos. Let me tell you, it was not easy for me. The engineer does not how to insert the power cable into the socket (needed "fifty times greater force", must have measured it obviously), doesn't know that ground pin is longer then blades on audio cables.

Nothing wrong with longer ground connection.  Or requiring more force.  The problem is having a jacket around the plug that slides forward as you push it into the socket, making it not possible for all the pins to make a connection.  This caused the cable to not even be functional until I realized what was happening!  It is all explained in my video:

 

 

 

Here is an example Amir doesn’t understand what he is measuring. 

You say that but then post a video from the company and not my review and responses.  If you watch them, you realize it is Paul who a) hasn't properly measured the product to see if it makes any difference in the output of your audio products and b) doesn't know his own product has current limiting so reduces amplifier performance.  I have done no less than three videos on this:

 

 

 

Paul is charismatic on camera and does have good knowledge of audio.  But be careful in believing everything he says.  Above is a great example.

Honest question, couldn’t we say the same about you?

It would be a HUGE compliment to say I am charismatic on camera!!! 😁

Or are there no faults with your history in audio and measurements?

I am nearing 2,000 measurements of audio gear.  Large number of major companies read ASR and participate in it.  The level of scrutiny is off the charts.  Despite all this, the number of times I have had to re-address a review can be counted on one hand.  

The reason is simple: I run the same set of tests on every product category.  The tests have been battle tested and blow away the meager or non-existent measurements from companies.  I have also been measuring audio gear for 30+ years now.  I am an electrical engineer and put myself through college repairing thousands of audio gear.  My professional experience has spanned all aspects of modern audio technologies such as streaming, networking, operating systems, embedded development, chip design, PCB and analog layouts, safety and regulatory issues, user interface, performance, to name just a few.

This doesn't mean I know everything in the world but it does qualify me quite well to be doing what I am doing.  When CEO or a company that has been removed from design for years claims that their product does X, when I measure it and it does Y, compared with my knowledge of the design and technology, then you should pay attention.  Don't be dismissive and say the opposite.

 

He's a YouTuber who uses this site to promote his, just as numerous others have done here before him. 

My youtube channel was started way after I created ASR by user requests.  Like ASR itself, it is not commercial.  Has no monetization, sponsorships or ads of any sort.  In that regard, I am NOT like any other audio youtuber or most youtubers.  Mind you, with nearly 50K subscribers, there is good money to be had but I refuse to go there.  So whether one person views my videos or a million, it doesn't make a difference to me.

They all rely on controversy and drama to whip up enthusiasm and if there's not enough excitement to generate the clicks they'll invent their own conflicts.

A lot of my videos are educational which by definition don't fall in that category.  I actually don't publish many product reviews in youtube but when I do, many are positive and without controversy.  Here is a combination of both where I talk about performance of Genelec 8050B speaker and  how to read and understand speaker measurements:

 

Videos are recorded live and uploaded with no edits.  No fancy purple lighting.  No clickbait titles, etc.

The only reason to dislike them would be because you don't like it when reliable data, science and engineering speak.  

But yes, there are a number of reviews showing poor performing gear.  Compare that to reviews on audio channels which they don't dislike anything they review.  As long as they get free loaner gear to test and drive traffic to their channel, the product is the best they have heard, punches above its weight, has darkest background, widest and deepest soundstage, sound analog, etc.  In other words, you can get an AI to write the reviews!

 

Amir hates tube amps because they measure bad, yet countless audiophiles love tubes, myself included. The guy wouldn’t pass a blind test to save his life. He needs a chart to tell him.

I both own tube amp and have passed countless blind tests:

 

 If I’m watching a magic trick, I don’t want to know how it’s done. 

Neither do I.  I don't care what is inside your gear.  All I care, and so do many of your fellow audiophiles, is that the signal that is sent to it, comes out the other end unmolested and as such, respects the content as authored.  A tube amp that has copious amount of distortion and adds coloration due to its high impedance, doesn't do that.  You can still "love" said tube amp but don't go making an argument out of it.

Does that kind of response sound like you are educating others?

Sure.  The transistor is one of the most critical inventions there is.  This site would not exit, nor the Internet without it.  It drastically reduces power consumption, shrinks the sizes of components and provides incredible fidelity that no tube product ever produced.  As if to try to be hip by being contrarians, some audiophiles have clung to tubes, hypnotized by the glowing filaments, convincing themselves that they are hearing better fidelity. 

So here I come and show how much dirt the tube amp is throwing in the signal.  And that for this privilege, you pay boatload of money to boot.  Any rational person would say what you quoted.  It is like building a car today with a steam engine and claiming it goes faster than a Porsche but when the data comes out that it accelerates at 1/100 of the rate, expect praise to be poured over said steam engine car!

Granted, that example was that of a better designed tube amp:

 

This is how it performed:

 

Why in the heck should anyone buy a tube amp when even a good example has this kind of noise and distortion?  Again, do you not have any respect for the work of the artist and engineers and produced the content?  They didn't use this amp to produce the music, right?  Why do you want to serve their food in such a dirty dish?

You simply refuse to match gear properly.

Oh.  That is like saying this is a great car but you better weigh less than 100 pounds to drive it!  It is not my job to "match" gear when I can buy huge number of other amplifiers that don't need any matching. How would matching reduces its noise and distortion?  How do you know the impedance of the amp and the impedance of the speaker to know how to match them?  Answer: you do that with measurements.  But again, why, oh why?  

There is not one controlled listening test that shows any of these tube amps to sound better.  All of the fans and companies producing tube amps have not had the wherewithal to produce just a single, ears-only test, to show that they sound better. If it is so easy to tell they sound better, why don't you produce this simple test result?

I tell you why: because you won't find the answer you are looking for.  Tube amps at best have harmless distortion.  At worst and in many cases, have clear audible noise and distortion.  In the case of tube amplifiers, that is trivially shown as they run out of power and distortion like hell.  

You want to believe in fantasies and magic?  Do that. But don't tell me this picture of fidelity:

 

Or you could have this:

 

All of the above are with dead easy to drive resistive loads by the way.  And at just 5 watts.  These tube amps are pure noise and distortion generators.  They are an insult to decades of progress in engineering to resort to them for anything other than nostalgic look.

 

@amir_asr If solid state is so much better than antiquated tube gear then why are so many manufactures still using this old science?

I will give you the answer Bob Carver gave me. As you probably know, he built his career on solid state amplifiers. And even won a challenge organized by Stereophile by making his solid state amplifier sound like a tube amp chosen by stereophile editors.

So naturally I was curious why he has been into tubes. His answer? There was too much competition in solid state space but much less so in tubes! And that tubes were more fun to design. Translation: nothing in there for an audiophile.

Sadly, his tube amps leave a lot to be desired, advertising specs that it cannot meet despite its high cost:

 

As you can see here, it has 3rd order distortion, not the beloved 2nd order:

 

And tons of mains noise for added effect.

Can’t deliver a flat response in audible band which solid state amps do in their sleep:

Worst of all, they advertise 75 watts but the thing can’t go past 29 watts.

 

This is why we measure folks. To get solid information like this as a check on manufacturer claims.

Back to your question, there is no doubt whatsoever that tubes are a marketing tool and differentiation as Bob said. You get underpowered, noisy and high distortion amplifiers and you pay a lot more for it, and have a ton of maintenance to go with it.

Folks see the glowing filaments and confuse that with "warm sound." When I listen to these amps, they are anything but warm. Turn up the volume and they get muddy and routinely bright. Exactly as the measurements predict. See this measurement of the Carver:

 

Notice how it is blowing its brains out at 20 Hz.

This is primitive technology. The fact that folks throw so much good money after bad over them, only works if you convince people to hate measurements and simple engineering explanation.

The only plausible but random benefit would be that if the high impedance of the amplifier modifies the frequency response of the speaker in the way that makes it more pleasing. That is, two bads working together to make good. Again, this is a random coincident. Better get a proper speaker and drive it with a proper solid state amplifier and get the fidelity you want. If something doesn’t sound good then, it is in your content.

Isn't it interesting Amir how you think audiophiles who look at glowing tubes in the dark are delusional, ...

Please don't make up stuff.  I never said anyone is "delusional." 

Everyone is *human.*  Humans use all of their senses and past experiences to arrive at a conclusion.  As such, someone saying this and that sounds better when the science says otherwise, requires controlled testing that isolates the sound alone.  Without it, all of us, me included, could provide totally unreliable and wrong information.  

 yet when you look at graphs, you continually convince yourself you are hearing all sorts of horrible distortion. 

Could be but if you are worried about this, how come you are comfortable making conclusions in your sighted listening?  

I don't believe you even know what you're listening to most of the time assuming you even take the time to listen in the first place. 

I am a professionally trained listener.  I listen to music many hours a day.  I perform a ton of controlled testing.  Countless reviews I do include listening tests.  Here is a recent review with listening tests: 

"ZMF Bokeh Headphone Listening Tests and Equalization
First listen impression was non offensive sound which is good in my book. I started by adding EQ to high frequencies first:

 

That quickly showed that without it, the sound was quite dull with essentially no spatial effects. There was just enough bass but I felt it could have more so put that shelf in there. And added a dip for the extra energy in upper bass. Now the bass was impressive. Note that I deviated from measurements in setting the 6 KHz lower as to avoid extra brightness.

I then sat back and listened. The sound was excellent now on every reference track I have. Bass was thunderous and clean as was the rest of the response. Spatial qualities were improved good bit and I really, really enjoyed the sound. So much so that I am listening to it while typing this."

The equalizations I develop like above routinely get tested and verified by other users and many compliment on how much better their headphones/speakers sound because of them.

I also teach how to become a trained listener as I post earlier.

 

Finally, you all have been tested formally and shown to be incredibly unreliable compared to trained listeners:

 

So if i were you, I would not bring up the topic of who knows how to listen and who doesn't.

I think most of the asr guys live in their grandmas basement and can only afford the “perfectly” measuring 100 buck topping dac so it’s better and anyone who wants more is a Moron. 

We don't think anyone is a moron.  We think they are uninformed about how their hearing really works and trust things that are not real and can be trivially shown to be the case.  Instead of listening to people who know this topic well, they walk around with fingers in the ear and brag about it too. 

Fortunately, huge number of audiophiles have enough common sense to see the value of measurements, and proper analysis of audio gear rather than believing in folklore you can't prove.  This is why ASR has over 2 million visitors a month, dwarfing traditional rags such as stereophile:

 

That aside, you have no idea what you are talking about.  My own system costs $100,000.  Just this week I tested a $12,000 processor from a member: