The question should really be, Is so-called "Blind Testing" really completely impartial. If the owner sets up the gear in his own room, the test can't be '' blind '' Most people simply don't have the room or space to complete any sort of test. Simply removing all the junk, and furniture out of the room leaving a clean, clear space is never going to happen.If it does divorce quickly follows. So your so-called test is simply a comparison of two or more products, And as you've set up the system you already know what's, what. So all the result your going to get is pre-determined before you start.
I hear this all the time, the measurements tell me this or that, The facts are all the measurements in the world will never tell you what something sounds like. Or this Lead or Cable makes it sound better then the old cable. Simple because you have obtained a new cable and the cost justify's the change, If it sounded the same why would you have spent good money on a new cable, So it must sound better.
If we could go into a vacant space with unknown amplification, we could perhaps compare it to something we have never heard before. Some manufacturers spend a fortune on testing, A few build special rooms, Magico are one such company, But when your testing speakers worth close to a million dollars and amplification worth nearly as much, You have to get it right The M 9 is one such speaker, Which was first displayed in a static display at Munich Audio Fair.. That pair was sold at the show and went to Hong Kong.So the story goes.
This is Magico's new room.
Ttps://www.monoandstereo.com/2022/04/new-magico-listening-room.HTML
And a short video on how it was constructed
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You are right. That's why I prefer to rely on science, and that includes logic science. For example, believers of different amps with specs and measurements that indicate any differences in distortions, frequency response, SNR/DR, DF, CT, linearity etc, will not be detectable by humans, then people such as the OP's claims that:
I agree with what this audio reviewer says about Parasound, McIntosh and Bryston at 11:15 in the video.
The Parasound JC5 Review! True Hi-Fi excellence. - YouTube Maybe the sound has to do more with the overall components vs 2nd harmonic distortion.
I clearly hear a difference when played the same song through 3 different amps with the same stereo.
are illogical, if we are comparing amps such as those Parasound, Bryston, and I would add the likes of McIntosh, NAD, Rotel's as well.
To be clear, I am not saying all amp sounds the same at all though and would not participate in that kind of debates.
As I said, I trust science enough to rely on specs and measurements but just for curiosity, and while still have a few comparable amps (by specs), decided to do some blind test including DBT in a couple tests just to find out how a newly acquired low cost class D amp would fare with my class AAB amps.
I owned the Halo A21, and Bryston 4B SST for quite a few years and I know in a controlled blind test they sounded same enough to be indistinguishable. That's before I saw any Youtuber reviews and/or measurements on those amps. All I knew at time of purchase was their published audio specs.
So, we compared those amps with a tiny buckeye Hypex NC502MP class D amp and to do the AB tests we spent a couple hundred dollars (C$) on selector switches. In all level matched (using REW) blind tests we could not tell them apart no matter how hard we tried. One of us could tell a subtle difference when compared the buckeye amp with the Harman Kardon HK3390.
I think even the believers would agree that while there are many factors that could affect audible sound difference, the main ones ought to be frequency response, distortions, noise (that would give a hint to id the device, if high enough), cross talk. If we examine the audio specs and measurable performance of the likes of those Parasound, Bryston, Hypex amps, we won't find difference that would indicate they will sound audibly difference to normal people. So why do people continue to hear differences between such amps? There are no scientific/logical reasons, other than the psychologically related ones I guess..
As I mentioned a few times, one of the respected legendary class amp design engineer, Mr. Peter Walker didn't do listening test to design his amplifiers, only did them to detect if there was something wrong, as part of quality control (I assume..).
Take a look of any high end, highly accurate speaker's frequency response and distortions graphs, and you can see that in a "go by ears" listening test, even slightly move your "ears" a few inches, frequency response would change so much that any measurable differences between amps (the ones mentioned) look obviously inconsequential during those AB comparison listening tests.
Lastly, scientists, engineers design all those amplifiers to be transparent, yet that people claimed all have audibly different sound, yet those people don't own the people who designed those amps, so if what they thought they heard were real, then they would have to do a large number of home auditions, to find their preferred "sound". Good luck to them!!