I certainly understand your reasons for being skeptical, so let me expound: I have in the past changed gear and have had to stretch to determine what the differences were. The differences were very subtle and I would be skeptical over my findings, but when switching from the outlaw to the nad, the differences were very apparent and undeniable. I bought both at the same time and had the incentive to return the nad because it was so much more expensive, so by all means I would be happy to be proven wrong. The difference in sound was like switching from a low quality receive to a higher quality one I e. Very apparent difference.
I'm sure there were differences. I believe you.
Certainly possible the one amp was playing a little louder than the other. Most people don't level match (including me) while listening casually at home, and this can lead to all sorts of (unintended) sound quality differences.
The other point that needs to be driven home is that listening while sighted can introduce all manner of biases into the "listening". Knowing what you are listening to can introduce a bias that can readily explain what you heard.
Simply switching between two amplifiers in an uncontrolled listening session can introduce a host of variables leading to very obvious differences.
For a little background, I had ran audyssey two times with each amp, used the same source, and volume matched--although I didn't use a dB meter but went from what audyssey calibrated to be reference.
That's not level matching and running Audyssey in itself is a big enough confounder to contaminate the results.
Level matching requires a multimeter hooked up across the speaker terminals using a selection of frequencies to measure against. You measure the voltages across the terminals at those frequencies and ensure both amplifiers are within +- 100th of a volt (+- 0.1 dB or better).
A small level difference can lead to the perception of an audible difference. Hence the importance of level matching. Just remember, level matching is just
one variable. There are many others.
Each time the difference was very apparent. I even still wanted to keep the outlaw so I attempted to adjust the pre/pro to see if I could create the same effect, but to no avail.
I've heard very audible differences between AVR's and integrated amps myself while listening casually and simply switching them manually.
I've also heard people hear very audible differences between AVR's and integrated amps when no switching was done - ie a phantom switch. Go figure.