Two sealed copies of identical discs will be opened and identically treated with Walker Audio Vivid, my standard procedure.
Originally said by MICHAEL ANDA
All accessory products I use within my system are allowed to remain.
Metullus said:1. What is the possibility that two "identical" CDs are not, in fact, indistiguishible from one another?
jmercer said:Unless one is damaged, theoretically they should be identical since they are digital in nature. Either the 1's and 0's are there or they're not. Loss of a few bits here and there wouldn't be detectible. Loss of multiple bits might be.
The more I think about it, the more I object to this surface treatment. It's possible that the surface treatment may alter the CD player's ability to read the digital pattern properly, distorting the sound.
melba said:It doesn't matter if the two original disks are not quite identical. The test is not to tell two disks apart, but to determine which has been "chipped" and which not. The disks are to be randomly chipped by the tester during the testing process.
The surface treatment shouldn't be a problem either--the applicant seems to be saying that ALL disks will get the surface treatment. But only half will be "chipped".
This shouldn't matter. The protocol should be double blind. Even if the applicant could rig something to change a CD, the applicant should be blinded from which CD was being given the treatment. If I knew that a magnet changed a CD's properties and had devices that could detect that, the protocol should be such that I am blinded to which CDs I might be affecting. Same thing with surface treatments. The applicant should be able to do whatever treatments he wants to the CDs, because he should be blinded from either which CDs are given the "magic" treatment.Timothy said:I can imagine any number of ways that the applicant's own equipment (which he requires for this test) could be rigged to surreptitously "mark" the CD in a way that would be audibly detectable. Remeber, his claim is to only distinguish between two CDs, as opposed to the manufacturer's claim to improve CD sound. Depending on the cleverness, electronics savvy, and skill of the applicant he could ...
... Rig a device inside his CD player that would wipe, spray, tick, scratch, burn, etc. the CD as it rotates during the "chipping" by detecting the presence of a RFID chip, magnet, or weight of the GSID on the player.
... Remote control a marking when he knew the "chipping" was occuring.
Of course the identifying mark should not be on the disc where it could be detected by an electronic device. The disc should have only an identifier as to which disk it is. A seperate list blinded to all of the test apparatus would record whether or not that disk was or was not treated.At such as I deem appropriate, I will leave my listening seat and place either marker atop the transport. At this time the chosen observors will open the transport door and compare the identifying mark on the disc with the identifying marker I have placed atop the transport. This process will continue until I have made 5 successful identifications within each given session.
DevilsAdvocate said:The protocol should be double blind. Even if the applicant could rig something to change a CD, the applicant should be blinded from which CD was being given the treatment. If I knew that a magnet changed a CD's properties and had devices that could detect that, the protocol should be such that I am blinded to which CDs I might be affecting. Same thing with surface treatments. The applicant should be able to do whatever treatments he wants to the CDs, because he should be blinded from either which CDs are given the "magic" treatment.
Good point. Really the test is whether or not a GSID affects sound quality of a CD. If the GSID can produce a "degradation of sound" then the GSID really does have an effect, which is the applicants claim. Of course, as you stated, it is possible that the GSID doesn't actually affect the CD, but rather affects a custom made device within the CD player which in turn affects the CD.Timothy said:It's not a question of the protocol being double blind, it's a question of the presence of the GSID affecting the CD in a fraudulent way.
Example: All GSIDs may contain a RFID chip for tracking purposes. Surreptitious device inside applicant's CD player constructed to defraud JREF may detect the presence of the GSID on top of the player, and while player spins up, marks the playable side of the CD with a mark that produces an audible tick, click, degradation of sound, etc.
- Timothy