I was on ASR a while back, just to see what the fuss was about. And I lost interest in the reviews (and the support of its members) in a short amount of time. Bought quite a few top-performing units based on the master table, didn’t like them, sold them. End of story.
I can understand what Amir is trying to do: become a popular/credible source on the internet among audiophiles, audio enthusiasts, and audio professionals. Being "the" faultless" source of information to others who share his interest in audio gear. Furthermore, he went out of his way to purchase costly measurement systems: Audio precision measurement system, speaker measurement rig, and even a headphone measurement rig! Could have spent that money on audio gear!!
Not to bash Amir or ASR, but he has been kicked off/deleted/banned from nearly every audio forum on the internet. Some years ago, this was visible on a bunch of forums (as him being a banned member) but now, I think we can only see his 15k plus posts on Whats Best Forum.
One of which that makes me laugh is him talking about being a subjectivist and "battling" objectivists; then somehow becoming an "objectivist" and going against the grain, in other words: listening and ignoring measurements vs not. There is a nearly infinite number of his posts I’ve read whereby his constant misunderstandings and drivel is enough to make even the most balanced forum members furious.
I think Amir is a reasonable guy, intelligent, yet is investing his time, money, and energy in the wrong places. His community is always quick to mention that a $100 DAC that measures well will sound identical; not volume matching, higher THD levels, and not taking blind tests are the only retorts they can fathom. Rather then, say: audio components "are different’ at the fundamental level, and therefore, will sound different as a result, which they do - it becomes: measurements are everything.
Those measurements don’t include: damping factor, wow, flutter, gang errors (between circuits), side-by-side null testing, using an oscilloscope, input/output sensitivity, testing internal parts, or even an indication/certification of quality control. For this reason, quite a few units that measured well fail prematurely, according to ASRs own members. (that’s what you get when cost-savings was the top priority for manufacturers).
Who is Thorsten Loesch ? is this a well-known person in the audio industry/hobby?