Honesty of the Reviewers


How honest you think the reviewers are? How often you see them saying one component is not good, most of time they will say this is the one of the best..... And you think when they say "I like it so I buy it." is more like " I get it free from the manufactor"?
bigboy

Showing 4 responses by rok2id

Well there certainly was something romantic about analogue tape.

 

Sure was.  I still have my Nakamichi 700 and RX505.  They could be placed in an art gallery.

 

what the reviewers should be saying is that things are changing constantly, but not always for the better.

They should, but they won't.  Everyone has an agenda.

 

Cheers

@westcoastaudiophile,

I apologize for my jaded attitude towards it all.  I cannot remember all the dragons(noise, distortion etc) I have encountered since I started almost 60 years ago.  A few were slain, primarily in the tape recording arena, most were just tamed.  Some just sort of disappeared by themselves.  JITTER, TIM, and SLEW RATE come to mind.  On day they were all the rage, the next day they were never discussed again.  And some just made a come-back, warts and all.  LPs.

The whole industry reminds me of what a British news reporter once said concerning electronics, "we all just sit here like knots on a log waiting for the next American Gadget that we can't live without."

Cheers

 

 

 

there really is more to wire than gauge

Speaker cable is a bit different from a lot of the interconnect cables we handle, in several respects. Because speakers are driven at low impedance (typically 4 or 8 ohms) and high current, speaker cables are, for all practical purposes, immune from interference from EMI or RFI, so shielding isn’t required. The low impedance of the circuit, meanwhile, makes capacitance, which can be an issue in high-impedance line or microphone-level connections practically irrelevant. The biggest issue in speaker cables, from the point of view of sound quality, is simply conductivity; the lower the resistance of the cable, the lower the contribution of the speaker cable’s resistance to the damping factor, and the flatter the frequency response will be. While one can spend thousands of dollars on exotic speaker cable, in the end analysis, it’s the sheer conductivity of the cable, and (barring a really odd design, which may introduce various undesirable effects) little else that matters. The answer to keeping conductivity high is simple: the larger the wire, the lower the resistance, and the higher the conductivity. -- Blue Jeans Cable

That’s all there is to know about wire. No magic, no sentient being.

 

Frequency response is not paramount

If not paramount, I can’t think of any other thing that is more important. The entire freq spectrum of the music must be reproduced.

 

Signal to noise unless obnoxiously bad isn’t even relevant

Would you buy an amp with 15% THD? Regardless of what you hear, it’s an indication of the skill of the amp designer.

 

Watts aren’t equal and hardly even matter

The watt is the unit of measurement of electrical power.  Period.  Manufacturers have been known to lie about watts.

 

the final arbiter of fidelity is the listener.

The listener is the final arbiter of the decision to buy or not. Fidelity can be measured. Fidelity being identified as the degree to which the signal is faithful to the original signal. Once into your speaker and out into your room, well, that’s unknowable except to the listener.

 

Cheers

I cannot believe what I'm reading.  If any of you Audiophiles really desired honesty in reviews / reviewers, you would not have destroyed Julian Hirsch and Stereo Review.

All it takes to be a reviewer these days is to ask, what is the MSRP?  The higher the MSRP, the mo' better it must be.  Also, knowing a few nonsensical words to describe things helps.

My favorite, "it's a nice well rounded amplifier, but it's not built for anger."  (what hifi)

 

Cheers