think this is a little condescending. This strikes me as a bit like defining "crazy" as "whoever is 10% more into it than I am."
My official view is that no matter how skeptical I am about a claim, and no matter how ludicrous I find an explanation, I steel myself against alleging delusion or bias of the reporter because of my view that just because I don't hear it and just because you don't hear it does not mean that somebody else doesn't hear it.
But if you have good reasons to be skeptical, especially to find a claim "ludicrous," why doesn't that give you good reason to doubt someone's claim?
If "Joe" tells a physicist that he built a perpetual motion machine in his garage, the physicist doesn't need to "experience it for himself." He has very firm grounds to conclude it is impossible and Joe has come to an erroneous belief.
Likewise, if someone says he can hear up to 200 kHz like a bat, there is no need to take such a claim seriously. We know quite a bit about the limitations of human hearing.
The same goes for if an audiophile claims to hear a difference between component A and B where the signal differences measure well below known human limits. If the audiophile claims to hear beyond well known limits, it should be up to him/her to at least establish this (e.g. take an audiology test).
I agree that we should have an open mind to a point, and certainly always be open to simply being wrong (and that includes being wrong about current science about human perception). On the other hand, a lot of stuff gets believed in the audiophile world on the "open mind" approach, and very often in the face of an implausible claim the audiophile will say "Well, science doesn't really know enough about this to shut the door on it" and that is often simply projecting their own ignorance of the relevant science. Just like someone not familiar enough with physics saying "we can't just dismiss Joe has a perpetual motion machine, science doesn't know everything."
went into my early power cord comparisons prejudiced and believing:
1) there shouldn't be a sonic difference, and
2) even if there was a difference to be heard I probably wouldn't be able to hear it.
I was wrong on both counts, unfortunately.
To me, that last sentence is very important:
I was wrong on both counts, unfortunately.
I've seen many audiophiles say the same thing about items like cables "wish they didn't make a difference, but they do!"
So why is it "unfortunate?" Presumably because high end cables can be a significant expense, and introduce more variables to worry about in a system.
And that is precisely why some of us actually care whether such claims are true! We don't want to "unfortunately" spend money (and time and worry and fiddling) on something that doesn't actually improve the sound. That's where folks like Amir (disparaged as he might be by some) come in very handy - putting such claims to test. Many audiophiles have said "thanks, you've saved me time and money" on some of the gear he has tested.
From my own experience: I once had several Shunyata AC cables back when Shunyata had made a big splash in the audio world. I was skeptical...but open to trying. Well I didn't hear a difference with a couple of them, but ONE of the Shunyata cables seemed to make an obvious sonic difference in my system. I was quite surprised! I kept listening on and off for a week or two, and each time I swapped it out for the stock cheap power cable, I'd hear a change in sound.
Now, if I had stopped there I may well have come to a similar conclusion as you did: Well, looks like I found out these cables really DO change the sound.
But I didn't stop there: knowing the propensity for sighted listening biases, I had someone help me blind test between the Shunyata cable and the cheap stock cable. And once I didn't know which was which, guess what? No sonic difference! None of the "obvious" traits I thought I heard with the Shunyata were there to cue me - they sounded indistinguishable.
I took that (and other blind testing) as a significant lesson in just what it can fee like, in the usual audiophile listening scenario, to "hear" sonic differences that were not really there.
This is why I am not so fast to just accept another audiophile's anecdotal listening (or my own sighted listening) as determining the truth of the claims made for these products. And I put that together with the host of incredibly dubious claims made for cables by manufacturers and audiophiles. Even Shunyata, who some audiophiles think to have provided "objective measurable evidence" for their cables, don't seem to notice that Shunyata has done no such thing. Measuring changes in noise through a cable, or when plugged in to an electrical outlet, is NOT the same thing as measuring or demonstrating they actually have an audible effect on a music signal in a system! They never show that. They just put out some of their tests and leave the implication for the audiophile "see look at the noise going down" and so the audiophile can listen in sighted conditions and think "wow, I hear a difference, so it's all legit!"
Again, I don't think ANY audiophile has to bother with more rigorous testing. I'm only giving reasons why I (and not a few other audiophiles) have reasons to remain skeptical about a lot of these claims.
Cheers.