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Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
I got my latest copy of 'Stereophile' yesterday and started to read it. I
came across comments by Paul Messenger about some work that Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan have recently put onto the web. This seems to be taken by Paul Messenger as showing that Russ's claims re some of his products are "now supported by proper scientific analysis". But having looked at http://www.russandrews.com/downloads...estPremRes.pdf [above file size 700K] I can't say I agree with that belief simply on the basis of what the above contains. But that may in part be because I've examined a past set of measurements by Ben Duncan and come to rather different conclusions to the ones he and a co-author asserted about them at the time.[1] I would therefore like to know all the measurement systems/proceedure details that are sadly omitted from the above. I thought others here might be interested to read the above pdf and consider it for themself. I am curious to know if the reactions of others agree with my own. In particular, if others can spot 'The dog that did not bark in the night'. :-) Enjoy, Jim [1] See http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~www_pa/...eshift/cp.html -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 09:03:51 +0100, Jim Lesurf
wrote: I got my latest copy of 'Stereophile' yesterday and started to read it. I came across comments by Paul Messenger about some work that Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan have recently put onto the web. This seems to be taken by Paul Messenger as showing that Russ's claims re some of his products are "now supported by proper scientific analysis". But having looked at http://www.russandrews.com/downloads...estPremRes.pdf [above file size 700K] I can't say I agree with that belief simply on the basis of what the above contains. But that may in part be because I've examined a past set of measurements by Ben Duncan and come to rather different conclusions to the ones he and a co-author asserted about them at the time.[1] I would therefore like to know all the measurement systems/proceedure details that are sadly omitted from the above. I thought others here might be interested to read the above pdf and consider it for themself. I am curious to know if the reactions of others agree with my own. In particular, if others can spot 'The dog that did not bark in the night'. :-) Enjoy, Jim [1] See http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~www_pa/...eshift/cp.html Interesting. The big problem here is that they were measuring the wrong thing. They should have been measuring effects at speaker terminals, not on power rails. My intuition tells me that the audible difference between 80 and 90 dB of attenuation at the power rails is going to be close to zero. After all, you must add to that the CMRR, which is already going to be the right side of 100dB, so effectively we are talking the difference between -180 and -190. Both of these are altogether huge compared to what is actually needed. Add to that the idea that 1000V spikes are common enough occurrences that they impinge on your day to day listening, (rather than being a "bugger me, what was that?" moment as half the fuses in the house blow), and require dealing with for listening pleasure. Of course, if this were a single ended valve amp with no intrinsic power supply rejection, there might be a case to be made. d |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 09:03:51 +0100, Jim Lesurf
wrote: I got my latest copy of 'Stereophile' yesterday and started to read it. I came across comments by Paul Messenger about some work that Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan have recently put onto the web. This seems to be taken by Paul Messenger as showing that Russ's claims re some of his products are "now supported by proper scientific analysis". But having looked at http://www.russandrews.com/downloads...estPremRes.pdf [above file size 700K] I can't say I agree with that belief simply on the basis of what the above contains. But that may in part be because I've examined a past set of measurements by Ben Duncan and come to rather different conclusions to the ones he and a co-author asserted about them at the time.[1] I would therefore like to know all the measurement systems/proceedure details that are sadly omitted from the above. I thought others here might be interested to read the above pdf and consider it for themself. I am curious to know if the reactions of others agree with my own. In particular, if others can spot 'The dog that did not bark in the night'. From the preamble: "...we set about conducting a series of robust scientific tests to back up the claims we have always made for our products’ abilities." He doesn't know the difference between science and theology. Do we really need to read further? |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:28:31 +0100, Laurence Payne
wrote: On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 09:03:51 +0100, Jim Lesurf wrote: I got my latest copy of 'Stereophile' yesterday and started to read it. I came across comments by Paul Messenger about some work that Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan have recently put onto the web. This seems to be taken by Paul Messenger as showing that Russ's claims re some of his products are "now supported by proper scientific analysis". But having looked at http://www.russandrews.com/downloads...estPremRes.pdf [above file size 700K] I can't say I agree with that belief simply on the basis of what the above contains. But that may in part be because I've examined a past set of measurements by Ben Duncan and come to rather different conclusions to the ones he and a co-author asserted about them at the time.[1] I would therefore like to know all the measurement systems/proceedure details that are sadly omitted from the above. I thought others here might be interested to read the above pdf and consider it for themself. I am curious to know if the reactions of others agree with my own. In particular, if others can spot 'The dog that did not bark in the night'. From the preamble: "...we set about conducting a series of robust scientific tests to back up the claims we have always made for our products’ abilities." He doesn't know the difference between science and theology. Do we really need to read further? I just looked at the last bit - the measurements. I know the Cyrus II very well (I have one), and its distortion characteristic is the same as every other amplifier on the planet - it rises at high frequency. According to his measurement it falls. That is actually a quite embarrassing article. Peer review will either be revealing or not. If his peers are anything like him in ability, it will presumably pass. d |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
In article , Laurence Payne
wrote: On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 09:03:51 +0100, Jim Lesurf wrote: I am curious to know if the reactions of others agree with my own. In particular, if others can spot 'The dog that did not bark in the night'. From the preamble: "...we set about conducting a series of robust scientific tests to back up the claims we have always made for our products abilities." He doesn't know the difference between science and theology. Do we really need to read further? Yes, the preamble, etc, do indicate that the tests may have been done on a different basis to the scientific approach. The aim seems to have been, "find some results that support what we think is the case". Whereas a scientific experiment would have been, "Devise a test whose outcome will distinguish between our idea being correct, or it being unreliable". However I do think it is worth reading further for two reasons. One is that ceasing to read, and not bothering to think about what they report would abdicate from being able to comment on the actual results. The second is that considering what they report does perhaps show some other things. e.g. 'the dog' I referred to. As with the older case I used as a footnote, sometimes published results give clues to what may have been problems with the measurement process, or at least make clear that - without more info which is presently witheld - the results can't be shown to establish the conclusions they (and Paul Messenger) presume. They may arise for other fairly simple reasons. FWIW I have emailed the contact they give, asking for more info. But I have no idea as yet if I will get a useful response. Until then, I can only have doubts about the 'measured results' since data can only be understood when you know all the relevant details of how it was obtained. The present pdf simply doesn't give the required details. WRT to 'the dog' I can ask two questions of people. Can you explain why the cables that are claimed to be 'better' exhibit the frequency dependence that they graphs show? Then ask, why does the 'BNC' cable not also show this? The answers may tell us something interesting about the measurement setup used... and the unspecified assumptions those reporting the measurements may have made. :-) If unsure, consider the setup error which was made in the previous case which I used as a footnote. ;- Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
Jim Lesurf wrote:
I got my latest copy of 'Stereophile' yesterday and started to read it. I came across comments by Paul Messenger about some work that Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan have recently put onto the web. This seems to be taken by Paul Messenger as showing that Russ's claims re some of his products are "now supported by proper scientific analysis". But having looked at http://www.russandrews.com/downloads...estPremRes.pdf There appear to be two components to this, do the Russ Andrews mains lead attenuate mains bourn noise and does mains bourn noise have any effect on Hi-Fi systems. It may have been demonstrated that the fancy cables can show some RF attenuation but it is not demonstrated that this has any effect on sound quality, that remains just a belief, "RFI is a major pollutant and we believe that it is one of the major reasons why Hi-Fi systems do not perform at their best". This is hardly peer reviewed science. In my view it is just more Hi-Fi magazine style guffology but I cannot prove that, it is just my belief based on the evidence of my unreliable ears, also not peer reviewed. Are either Paul Messenger or Ben Duncan trustworthy sources? Enjoy, -- David Pitt |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 12:17:15 +0100, David Pitt
wrote: Are either Paul Messenger or Ben Duncan trustworthy sources? I believe it was Ben Duncan, years ago, who attempted to show that speaker cables changed their delay characteristics with current. He set up an experiment to demonstrate this, measuring frequency response and delay with different currents - they did indeed change. Unfortunately, the way he changed the current was by changing the load on the end of the cable. It was of course this that changed the measured delay - perfectly in line with established theory. So no, Ben Duncan is not a reliable or trustworthy source. d |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
"Laurence Payne"
From the preamble: "...we set about conducting a series of robust scientific tests to back up the claims we have always made for our products' abilities." He doesn't know the difference between science and theology. Do we really need to read further? ** Nope. Your quote above reminds me of a line spoken in numerous B grade Western movies: A fat ugly guy, with a rope noose ready in his hand to lynch some poor unfortunate stranger, explains to the lone doubter that: " Of course he will get a fair trail - * THEN * we lynch him ..... " Ben Duncan has been openly batting for the dark side of audio sanity for decades - so he has zero credibility. Phil Hanson and Red Sheep Communications was unknown to me so I looked up his web site: www.redsheep.co.uk Looks a lot like a one man, advertising scam, agent for hire. No surprises there. Anyone know where the nooses are kept round here ??? ..... Phil |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
In article 4a3e17c2.716159265@localhost, Don Pearce
wrote: On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 12:17:15 +0100, David Pitt wrote: Are either Paul Messenger or Ben Duncan trustworthy sources? I believe it was Ben Duncan, years ago, who attempted to show that speaker cables changed their delay characteristics with current. He set up an experiment to demonstrate this, measuring frequency response and delay with different currents - they did indeed change. Unfortunately, the way he changed the current was by changing the load on the end of the cable. It was of course this that changed the measured delay - perfectly in line with established theory. Indeed. Hence the footnote URL I gave in my first posting. So no, Ben Duncan is not a reliable or trustworthy source. I would approach this slightly differently. Are the *measurements* a reliable source for the conclusions asserted in the pdf? My concern isn't with the personalities, nor with the way any of us can make a simple mistake. Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan :-)
"Jim Lesurf" I got my latest copy of 'Stereophile' yesterday and started to read it. ** For God's sake - WHY ????? I came across comments by Paul Messenger about some work that Russ Andrews and Ben Duncan have recently put onto the web. This seems to be taken by Paul Messenger as showing that Russ's claims re some of his products are "now supported by proper scientific analysis". ** Blah, blah, blah ........ Jim badly needs to catch up with the long published works of two of America's most prolific modern philosphers - I refer of course to Messrs Cheech and Chong. In relation to sighting doubtful brown objects directly in one's path while walking abroad, they discovered the following maxim: " If it looks like dog ****, smells like dog ****, feels like dog ****, tastes like dog ****. Must be dog ****. Good thing we didn't step in it! ". Poor, dumb Jim has it all over his shoes. ...... Phil |
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