What you dont get is your theory and methodology is flawed and it fits your circular reasoning to justify your own results. These results are not what all the others here are trying to achieve. You can make any sound you like, and master your recordings and "color" them as you see fit to make yourself happy. Enjoy that. However that is not what the overwhelming majority are trying to achieve. You are like a client coming in and telling me he wants everything to sound like it is in Carnegie Hall. A nice idea? well maybe to him but what he is asking for is a color , not reality, not what the recording sounds like but rather what he wants it to sound like. That is fine for him or you but not for me or most others.
Here is the kicker, the best a home stereo audio reproduction system can do, in the traditional high-audio is to faithfully reproduce what is on the recording. That is what is called “High-Fidelity” or HiFi. To this I ask you, how does one confirm that the sound from the speakers and at the listening ear matches that of the recording/media/source material?
Furthermore, you have others like Peter that don’t want their home audio system to sound like what’s on the recordings, with the close-mic’ed high frequency extension or such associated with recordings, but instead he wants his system to sound “Natural” and have the sound he hears from the audience perspective listening a distance back from the stage, when listening to live un-amplified acoustic music.
We all have our different goals and objectives. The Absolute Sound is a mirage.
Personally I explain to my clients what I do and what I can do. I explain the room and what it does and I actually go to those spaces and set up the gear to get the best result possible within the parameters of the space. If the space can use some change I talk to my client about that as well.
So your clients do not purchase based on what they hear in your demo room? I would think that if they like the sound in your demo room and make big outlay for The whole system that they are buying “that sound that they heard in the demo room”. Many will be disappointed if the sound at least fails to meet that expectation. Ever hear of the term “meet or exceed expectation” before?
I can't walk on water even if you think that you can.
I agree that you are limited with what you can do with the traditional approach and that is why I advocate for an approach the gives the user & installer flexibility and control by allowing them to dial in the resultant sound. There are many ways to do this so I’m not implying that you have to use one of the methods that I use.If you are clever enough, you will find a way to control either the mastering of the recordings or the transfer function of the system, or both. That is the part that you have to understand, those that are clever enough don’t let room acoustics and other items in the room dictate to them what the resultant sound is going to be. If you device a way to control the resultant sound, then you have the power to control the sound of your system through means other than equipment and cable substitutions, and acoustic treatments.
It is the endless carousel that audiophiles subject themselves to what I call chasing your tail. Back a couple years ago, when you sold the Level 1 WADAX Reference combo to your customers it was “the best”, then came the Level 2, then the Level 3, then the Level 4, now the Level 5 and tomorrow the Level 6. Get the picture yet?