No Doug once again I think you entirely missed it.
Break In Question?
I have been under the assumption that in order for a component to break in there must be a signal pass through from one piece of equipment to another. That is, running a Dac/Preamp into an amp, the amp must be turned on for the Dac/Preamp to break in.
But is this really true? Does the amp really need to be turned on?
ozzy
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@larsman You are missing the point entirely. Namely, a pair of cans that sound good after break in sound bad once a different reference is used. It shows the major effect of brain habituation (rewiring if you want to call it that way) in how sound is subjectively perceived. Of course it is your choice to ignore science. I prefer to understand my experiences and assess ear witness reports based on scientific knowledge. It helps me to separate fact from fiction. That is my bias as an actual STEM/MINT research scientist. |
@oberoniaomnia - No sir, I think you are. That statement 'a pair of cans that sound good after break in sound bad once a different reference is used' makes no sense to me. How do you know what they'll sound like with a 'different reference' (whatever that means; is it the same as a different source)? I'm sure you're an excellent scientist, but you've not been to my house. You have not heard my gear and you don't know how anything sounds here so you are reaching conclusions with no data. That doesn't sound very scientific to me. I'm explaining my experience and you are denying it. I'm not ignoring science, but I'm also not ignoring what I know to be true and you've not given me one reason why 150 hours playing to a chair back has anything to do with 'brain habituation'. Anyway, enjoy yer weekend!
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I love the way scientists and engineers think their profession adds any credibility. It hobbles you and you become a victim of your education as well as the way you choose to view the world. Of course the cans which were a past reference are no longer your current reference when you find something that sounds better. They dont sound bad, they just dont sound as good. Or if you are referring to the new reference as the source then they sound exactly the same as they did with different formats or music. The music changes nothing intrinsic about the cans. I respect your views, but you actually dont understand and I think this may be my point. When you absolutely know then why bother to grow or keep an open mind.
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