1: I have claimed unmeasurable distortions effect the sound like the chassis material.
2: I have claimed phase, and other aspects, can affect the "musical transparency", many of which are measurable
Two sepaerrate points, as i stated it before.
Two separate points which I’ve addressed.
1. I’m not sure what you mean by distortions caused by chassis material. But again, I’ve never seen, read about or even heard of an audible distortion that was unmeasurable. Please provide some reliable, relevant evidence of this phenomena.
2. But again, you’ve provided no reliable, relevant evidence of that claim. The examples you’ve given affect audio transparency in general, not specifically “musical transparency”. And, “
many of which are measurable” indicates that some are not measurable but again you’ve provided no reliable, relevant evidence to support your claim and the examples you’ve provided are in fact measurable.
… maybe I should be just as narrow minded.
Clearly you should be as narrow minded as me, instead of the far more narrow minded you’re being! For example:
I design audio, you record it.
No, I design audio, I record audio, I edit audio, mix and master audio and in so doing I identify all audible distortions and address them, whatever their cause.
So when i said it is not measurable I meant by test gear i use in the lab.
“Not measurable” means “unmeasurable” and you’ve used/claimed both of these terms. Now you’re saying that’s not what you meant, they are not necessarily unmeasurable, they’re just unmeasurable by you personally with your test gear, which is exceptionally narrow minded!
You said it is, because you can measure it by recording it.
I said it is because I can record a difference file from a null test (and analyse the measurement of amplitude and frequency it contains), use some other test equipment and a whole range of meters. Never have I encountered or heard of some type of audible distortion that I can’t somehow be detected by means other than just my ears and therefore I wouldn’t be able to address.
Why is it blatently untrue?
Because that is blatantly NOT “All you said …”, blatantly you have also said, repeatedly, there are unmeasurable distortions, musical distortions/musical transparency.
The right gear, which obviously I mean more musically transparent, will make it sound better.
If gear is audibly transparent, which most is, how does being “more musically transparent” make it sound better? If gear is not audibly transparent, then it has some form of audible distortion that will affect any type of sound, not specifically music. “Musical”transparency is therefore a meaningless term, exactly like all the other audiophile equipment marketing use of the term!
G