bluelightning
701 Club - QQ All-Star
Agreed. Most audiophile terms have real world definitions, just not pertinent to relating the sound to the science of electronics. An example being "analog sound" What electrical property/response contributes to an "Analog" sound ? muted high frequency response ? I have seen the term "Analog sound" applied to cables , again what electrical property ? Is it resistance, capacitance, inductance , some other voodoo ? Then comes "airiness" and the same set of questions arise. What makes a system sound airy ? Is it an elevated frequency response in the upper frequencies ? The list goes on and on. In any case I don't want another debate Just like to point some things out as a practicing electrical engineer."Analog" is certainly used that way, but is a real word with a real definition. Musicality is certainly more open to interpretation, but that is the rub in all of this, isn't it? How do you talk about sound? I'd rather talk about how something moves me than look at graphs and measurements (which, BTW, don't tell the whole story either as much as you would like to think they do), but to each their own I suppose.