How you know your system is improving?


Fellow Audio Junkies - 

Over the last few years, I've invested in my first high end system. It's been a far costlier affair than I'd initially conceived. I started off simply wanting to listen to music in my home. At this stage of my life, I was fortunate to have some resources to invest which led me down the path of reading forums and reviews, while also having the opportunity to visit a few audio stores to demo equipment.

And down the rabbit hole I went... Once I realized all the nuances of equipment and their impact on the listening experience, I became fascinated with creating the most satisfying musical experience in my house. I ended up purchasing several amps, three sets of speakers, NOS power tubes, and a myriad combination of power cords.

With each investment, I would often remark to myself "yes - I hear an improvement..." But sometimes a doubt would cross my mind. Is this some sort of confirmation bias I've got going? Am I just throwing money away? Do I need to see a shrink? 

Admittedly, I was largely convinced things were improving, but a small part of my brain recognized I might be have been chasing windmills... 

Which brings me to this question: "How do you know your system is improving after you've made a system change or hopeful upgrade?" 

For me, a moment came last night when I put on a piece of music - Beth Orton - and played a track that a year ago sounded muddy or poorly recorded. There have been several system changes since I last played that Beth Orton track. As I began streaming over Quboz, I could hear details in the music which had been previously fuzzy and hidden. The tone of her voice was more real. Guitar strings came out of the fog... 

I guess the concept I often read about here, "using a test track" had become my new litmus test on whether my system was improving. It was inadvertent, but I think I'll default to this approach more consistently moving forward, going back to a few tracks that have proven to be challenging with the current system and giving them a go when a new component gets added. 

Yes, I know... nothing radical here. But would welcome how many of you benchmark improvements in your own systems! 

bluethinker

Showing 4 responses by mihorn

One way to find if your system is improving is live-recording. I have >200 live-recordings of my systems over last 10 years in my YT channel. I can watch/hear the history (10 years) of my systems in YT.

Human ears are easily biased and get tired with different sounds. Also, human ears trick us too. But microphones are never tired and recordings always let me hear consistent sounds. I compare a recording of my speaker sound and the original music after the each fine tune of my speakers. And I adjust my speaker’s balance, tone, brightness, sound depth, forwardness, pressure of vocal, image height, musicality, openness, details of woofer and tweeter, naturalness, clarity, cleanness, etc. One can’t remember all these information by aural memory. Live-recording is only way to perform fine-tune of sounds in reproduction audio.

The ability to hear those delicate information can be acquired with experience and training. The capability (adjustability) of speaker and ability to fine-tune the speaker according to those information are a different topic. Alex/WTA

toddalin

Things can sound "changed" without sounding either better or worse and sometimes it just comes down to preference. And preference can change.

I know what you mean by preference. But I’m not talking preference. One is actually better than another. You can compare the voice of below 2 videos. I can clearly hear one is more real human voice. Once you hear the better one, you won’t want to hear another by preference. It took me 4 months for improvement between below 2 videos. Alex/WTA

1)

2)

toddalin

Will the Wave Touch system be demoed at T.H.E. Show in Costa Mesa in June?

Yes. Please visit my room (#272) at THE SHOW 2024, OC. Costa Mesa audio show on June 7-9. I look forward to meet many members. Please, all members, introduce yourself at the show. If possible, members will be served a beer (non-alcoholic)? Let’s have a fun. Alex/WTA