nige2000 wrote: ↑Fri May 04, 2018 12:29 am
is it not some type of modulation where one frequency affects another for example when two dissimilar instruments are playing negatively affecting one another
I don't think so as this would be easily seen in measurements & so far this hasn't happened
where improvements are heard as better instrumental clarity and a more individual, distinctive and accurate reproduction
these things are clearly audible with the sd card player vs usb solutions
My take on why we are perceiving these improvements is that noise which fluctuates depending on the ever-changing signal processing causes the start time of a sound to be not as well defined as when that noise is missing. Perceptually, the start time of sounds & the differences between timing of sounds reaching each ear (ITD) gives us our illusion of soundstage & distinctiveness of each instrument in that soundstage. A fluctuating noise & fluctuating timing of the start of sounds muddies this perception. This is particularly noticeable in the bass as this is where the ITD effect is strongest - above a certain frequency ( ithink 500Hz?) perception begins to rely on loudness differences (ILD) between sounds reaching the ears to define soundstage illusion.
another thing that seems to be affected is dynamics or speed thereof
the ability to have the power on demand to maintain the speed of the dynamic load
Yea, again this is a perceptual effect as there is no speed difference, it just appears that way. Again when the timing is accurately reproduced & doesn't fluctuate, the rhythm is nailed down & we are very sensitive to rhythmic sounds & their timing.
The other aspect that perception is very sensitive to & relies on, is the risetime of the signal - we use this attack portion of sounds to quickly define/categorise them. When this attack portion is without noise its inner detail is more clearly perceived & identified - quicker identification of exactly what is being heard.
such things are likely warrant a thread of their own
it easily proves that there is much to be improved in current commercial designs
Yep!!