Well maybe it IS my hearing


Hi everyone,
Lately I've gotten into some lively debates. One thing which I'm afraid we don't take into account enough is our own personal hearing. Truth is there's now way I can hear like I did when I was 20 something. So, quite likely I hear very differently than other A'goners. Just because I personally can't hear a difference in a power cable / tweak doesn't mean you don't. I don't make that claim. 

However I think it is also unfair to accuse me of having an agenda if I can't.


Lastly, if I can't hear a difference, the financial value I place on a more expensive tweak = zero. That's just the way my wallet operates. I'm not buying to impress others. My stereo is not my Mistress whom I must serve with more and more expensive shoes.  I just made her a very pretty red and carbon fiber and aluminum power and she's going to have to be happy with that.


I do take exception to over broad, fact less claims of performance however, or people working very hard to explain to me how wrong a person I must be if I can't hear a difference.


I think this is good for you as well. Buy what your ears tell you have value, and don't be swayed by crowds.


Best,
E
erik_squires
Everyone hears differently. Literally, differently. On a cellular level even. Haven't seen the genetics on hearing but the studies on taste and vision show genuine differences in perception that are grounded in biology. This is in addition to things like physical deterioration with age, trauma, etc.

This still leaves a whole lotta stuff people are able physically to hear, yet will not know or report that they heard until and unless they develop the ability or skill to do so. Which definitely includes the vocabulary necessary to describe what you're hearing. My view is there's a lot of this. In other words regardless of how bad you think your hearing is there's a lot more you can hear than you think. But like with any sport you just need to work on your technique.

For example- long ago I was sure there was no difference between cables and CD players. Several times I tried and could hear no difference, even between things as obviously different as my old Magnavox CDB-650 and a ten times as expensive (and helluva lot newer) Wadia. One time I even was there when a guy who had made an appointment came in to compare two very expensive CD players. Wadia or Proceed and Levinson, something like that. Stood right behind the guy, and he took his time, never saying a word until the end he says hate to say this but I'm not hearing any difference.

Ha! See! Its not just me! Its all a scam! This guy sees it now too!

Except, one thing kept bugging me. I just couldn't shake this feeling there was something different, and I really was hearing it, only I couldn't quite put my finger on it. 

The idea there were people who could hear stuff I could not, this frustrated the hell out of me. Absolutely had to get to the bottom of it.

And it took months- MONTHS! - until one day listening to of all things an XLO test CD track - at home, on my crap JBL lamp cord stereo- I had this epiphany. Eureka! I had finally begun to put my finger on a few of the sonic attributes that distinguished the sound of one component from another. And things went very fast from there.

By very fast I mean it only took another few months of this time dragging my wife around to see if she heard these things too, followed by a few more YEARS of driving around, home auditioning, reading, reading, reading, listening, listening, listening.

Which if a few years seems not very fast well it looks that way from 30 years later.

Probably two of those years I was active in audiophile clubs and by active I mean probably visited 30-50 homes, never passively listening either but always with a few components or tweaks to compare in their systems.

So while these are all listening skills I believe anyone can learn and that will enable anyone and everyone to hear all the crazy things people talk about, I also try and keep some perspective on just how long and hard they may need to devote themselves in order to do so.

It ain't easy. Sorry if I ever gave anyone a hard time acting like it is. 








Post removed 
How refreshing, that someone frequenting this site, actually realizes there are varying levels of aural acuity, possibly responsible for an inability/ability to hear certain things.  KUDOS, Erik!
 sfar ...not going to take up arms in erik's defense, he does that quite well. I'm just wondering why the silly post?
I've wondered if it would improve the quality of conversations here if the Audiogon site software automatically added a small icon, in the shape of an ear, next to a commenter's user name that, when clicked, linked to a copy of the commenter's hearing test done by a board certified audiologist within the last two years.


Erik's runnin a Luxman 509 if I remember correctly, finding power cord materials to enhance that is going to be an ongoing venture, imho.
   "Buy what your ears tell you have value, and don't be swayed by crowds."      Priceless wisdom!   
Post removed