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More chaotic cable arguments...
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<blockquote data-quote="AV" data-source="post: 13737" data-attributes="member: 472"><p>Thanks Ampdog</p><p></p><p>To me "accurate" and "blameless" had the same meaning, now I know better.</p><p></p><p>Only one thought on the blameless amplifiers. I believe, if say two designers build their blameless amplifiers, say both with "exactly" the same measurements, the two amplifiers will not sound the same. What I'm trying to say is that measurements can not tell you much of what an amplifier will sound like. This is where the listening part begin, tuning every stage to its optimum point, making sure that a piano, a drum, guitar etc. at least sound like a real one. (Even if we will never know what the original sounded like in the studio.) This process is unfortunately so time consuming that I think very little designers go there. I've heard quite a lot of well known, even "high end" amplifiers that can not realistically reproduce the sound of a drum.</p><p></p><p>Andr?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AV, post: 13737, member: 472"] Thanks Ampdog To me "accurate" and "blameless" had the same meaning, now I know better. Only one thought on the blameless amplifiers. I believe, if say two designers build their blameless amplifiers, say both with "exactly" the same measurements, the two amplifiers will not sound the same. What I'm trying to say is that measurements can not tell you much of what an amplifier will sound like. This is where the listening part begin, tuning every stage to its optimum point, making sure that a piano, a drum, guitar etc. at least sound like a real one. (Even if we will never know what the original sounded like in the studio.) This process is unfortunately so time consuming that I think very little designers go there. I've heard quite a lot of well known, even "high end" amplifiers that can not realistically reproduce the sound of a drum. Andr? [/QUOTE]
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