Wellfed said:
Bear in mind I had NO obligation to do ANY self-testing.
That's correct. Still a good idea, though.
I agreed to do this testing at the behest of JREF Forum participants as a gesture of good will.
You don't want to do your own (double) blind testing to gratify the JREF forum participants. Very few of us, if any, believe the thing does what is claimed, and your running a (double) blind test on yourself at home isn't going to change any opinions on that score. That's not why you want to test the thing before you make your challenge.
You want to do your own (double) blind test to make sure you haven't deceived
yourself. Face it: you
want to hear an improvement in your audio system's sound, and you
want to believe that your money spent buying (how many?) GSICs was money well-spent - after all, who likes believing he's wasted his money?
When a tester
wants to see a certain result, there is a powerful force working to convince him that he
has seen that result. That is one of the reasons that when a scientist publishes a new finding, the scientific community requires that his findings be reproducible by others. Others who have not invested years of work and research, and thousands or even millions of dollars, and untold prestige. That is, others who
don't have a personal stake in the success or failure of the first scientist's findings.
You've invested considerable time and money on this project, and not a small amount of prestige, and have received a fair amount of invective and ridicule for your troubles. You could make it all worthwhile by subjecting your hypothesis to a
serious test. If I understand what you did correctly, you treated (or had your wife treat)
one GSIC for your recent test, a test in which, as, IXP pointed out, you had a 75% chance of success
anyway, whether the thing worked or not. That is hardly a rigorous test.
I personally know that the GSIC alters the performance of compact discs.
How do you know that? Have you really subjected your GSIC to the kind of rigorous testing that many of us who have no more affiliation with the JREF than you have recommended?
There's a sig line that Huntsman likes to use:
Science is the process of crash testing ideas; the scientist does not coddle an idea, or design tests to make it work. The scientist rams the idea into a brick wall head-on at 60mph, and knowledge is gained by examining the pieces. If the theory is solid, the pieces are from the wall.
I'm a programmer by trade (I'm a "systems analyst" when I'm trying to impress the
ignoranti), and I have a similar attitude when I'm writing code. When you start writing a program, you're just trying to make it work. But there reaches a point where, yes, you've finally made it work, and comes time for the serious testing. That's when I tell my boss, "I'm not trying to make it work any more. I'm trying to make it fail."
When I can't make my program fail any more, then it's ready for SAT - Systems Acceptibility Testing. That's when
other people try to make it fail. And only when
they can't make it fail is it ready to go into production.
Can you honestly say your test rammed your hypothesis into a brick wall head-on at 60 mph?
Can you honestly say you've tried to make the GSIC fail?