Originally posted by cminor9
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Maybe it is in my own mind. Keep in mind I entered this as somewhat of a skeptic. So while perhaps there is a bit of a confirmation bias in my mind since I did pay money for the caps and wanted them to work, I certainly didn't expect to hear a difference. Perhaps if someone were to reimburse me for the caps, then things would change?
A double blind A-B test would have been ideal, but then of course I'd need an exact replica of the clone I built (with parts that measure all the same, natch.) Or I could have come up with some complex system of switches to switch the new ones out and the old ones in.
Also ideal would have been measuring each cap to ensure they were of the same value, and then viewing the signal on a scope and providing the traces for everyone.
It starts to get pretty absurd, doesn't it? Even then someone would make the claim that I slightly rerouted some wire or fixed a bad solder joint or heated a component one too many times. That's the way it is with these sorts of things. Believers believe and skeptics doubt, and there's nothing little ole me can do about that. Yes, caps are a holy war.
I got crap to do and a life to live and certainly not enough time or resources to do a proper scientific test or deal with people's faith in the mighty high-end cap. I just wanted to post my subjective, anecdotal results for everyone to see. I am starting to wonder why, though, see previous paragraph.
This is why I work in software development. ... Oh, there are still holy wars (coding style, development methodology, language, platform), but I guess I have the good sense to stay out of them.
What's scary about religious wars is that you cannot win a religious war with true believers. You can only eliminate the true believers on the other side. This bothers me a lot, and not just for musical appreciation reasons.
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