Do you go after the gun used in the crime, or the criminal?I notice the challenge is still about a person, rather than the cables. If it was about the cables, the facts of the matter, anybody could test that. In fact, why not just test the cables and find out?
You don't need any one person to test technology.
That makes no sense at all, it is the cables that the claims are made for, you have to test the cable and the person that makes claims for that cable, or the people who buy into is BS will call Foul.No no no! It is about the claimed abilities of the cables! Or ears. Or something. It isn't about cables, it is about the claims made about the cables! We need to test the claims! Not the cables!
I notice the challenge is still about a person, rather than the cables. If it was about the cables, the facts of the matter, anybody could test that. In fact, why not just test the cables and find out?
You don't need any one person to test technology.
Technology cannot apply for the MDC.You don't need any one person to test technology.
Technology cannot apply for the MDC.
You just don't seem to understand, the claims are many (many means a lot) orders of magnitude (well over a thousand times) below what humans can hear. And yes we do have the knowledge on hearing, because that is how the development of MP3 and AAC came about, you can not throw away data without knowing now hearing works. The only ones who claim we don’t know about hearing are those selling skin-oil.It may not be necessary to have supernatural hearing. We have lots of data on the ability to hear pitch and loudness and it is primarily that data that forms the basis of the counter claim that the cables are good enough that nobody should be able to hear a difference.
What we don't have as much data on is the ability to hear complex phase and coloring patterns such as used in locating sounds in the 3D space around us. When a listener has trained themselves to interpret these patterns for a particular stereo setup, how much of a change is necessary to break or distort the pattern recognition?
Sure, but this thread is about the MDC. If this was about technical testing of audio cables, it would have to be put into another forum.People seem to forget that the JREF is about more than just the MDC. Can't the idea of near $10,000 vs. $50 cables be debunked? Will that not benefit general understanding of the fraud?
Audio woo scammers are also onto something: the mark's cash.Snake oil. It's funny that snake oil salesmen may have been onto something.
http://sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa029&articleID=F7B4BAF7-E7F2-99DF-3870FFECA70C38C9There's an article at sciam.com, but I can't post the link because I have under 15 posts.
Here is what I am wondering? Is Pear Cable really selling what they say they are selling? Has anybody dissected one of their cables and looked at the materials to see if it really is what they claim?
Because a fraudulent product would in this case sound every bit as good as what they claim to be selling here.
Or perhaps someone could demonstrate the frequency response graph on their website was inaccurate ? If that graph was true pretty much any one of us could pass a DBT.
Or perhaps someone could demonstrate the frequency response graph on their website was inaccurate ? If that graph was true pretty much any one of us could pass a DBT.
Not really dBs. At around 20kHz in that graph the difference (red) reaches only 0.45 volts. What that might translate into dBs is not totally clear from that graph.Not really. The differences were above 10kHz and only a couple of dB.
Of course it is not helpful, it is their selling BS graph.http://www.pearcable.com/sub_products_comice_frequencyresponse.htm
It isn't a very helpful graph. But if it translates into real performance, there would be a difference.