I don't know what you are asking us to do Ethan. You say in front of professional audio engineers that transparency is achieved when minimum of 100 db is achieved in our signal/distortion to noise ratio. In front of the rest of us in these forums, you use much lower numbers by as much as 20 db.LOL, no, you should not go by one rule. I used 100 dB to be perfectly safe, to make a point I could be certain cannot be refuted. In practice, 80 dB is probably enough. Surely 90 dB is enough. Again, I've never heard the noise floor of 16-bit audio on normal music playing at normal levels. So I'm absolutely certain that -96 is a safe number too. Let's go with that one, okay?
I hope this satisfies you!
The obsession expressed over this audio gnat is staggering. It's as if you guys are trying with all your might to find a chink in my armor, to find some infinitesimal thing you can find fault with. As if that would somehow discredit my efforts to define fidelity in practical terms. It's not working. Maybe you need to start yet another thread with my name in the title.
--Ethan
The title of this thread and the topic at hand is at what level we can assure transparency. Not what is good enough. Not what is fine most of the time. But what is transparent all of the time. Seems to me the statement you presented to the professional industry is a better criteria because it better matches research by top people in the industry. None will come out and accept 80 or even 90 dB as a safe substitute.
So can we agree that to assure transparency the bar is your 100 dB criteria?