In scientific tests of all kinds of human perception, such as wine tasting, considerable effort is expended to hide the identity of what is being
subjectively evaluated. In audio, though, things are more relaxed, and people, who are otherwise serious, persist in the belief that they are immune to the influence of such factors as price, size, brand name, etc.
If you want to convince us – or anyone – that different loud speaker cables create different listening experiences (when all other audio gear is the same), it is essential to first demonstrate that listeners can reliably hear differences. In this thread, I don't see you mentioning that.
Listening tests must demonstrate that listeners can reliably hear differences when they do not know the identity of the cables – blind listening conditions. When you describe the various sounds you claim to hear, such as glassy sounding piano, can you hear them if another person switches cable while you are blind to the switch? Can others hear that, or only you? Again, I don't see you mentioning that.
All the various measurements of cable electrical & physical properties are irrelevant, unless they can be directly linked to the results of human listening tests, done with blinded listeners. Similarly, all the grand & glorious descriptions of the sounds you claim to hear when you are aware of what speaker cable you're using, are fantasies unless you can reproduce those results while you're listening under blinded conditions.
I could go on with other necessary features of how to do rigorous listening tests, that allow significant scientific conclusions, but I'll stop here. See this thread, especially post #10, for much more about that.
Not a thread to start a debate, but discuss objective testing, more like lack there of. Being Audioholics, I suspect few are under the impression expensive wire/cables/power cords have any effects on the sound, but I digress: If you were to run a proper objective blind A/B listening test that...
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