Neutral electronics are a farce...


Unless you're a rich recording engineer who record and listen to your own stuff on high end equipment, I doubt anyone can claim their stuff is neutral.  I get the feeling, if I were this guy, I'd be disappointed in the result. May be I'm wrong.
dracule1

Neutrality is a complete fiction. Most who subscribe to the concept make a subjective judgment that component A sounds more like the source than component B. Well, our hearing all differs, our systems all differ, and very few of us ever get to hear the source. And if we do get to hear it how can decide what in the long chain from recording studio to speaker is corrupting the signal and by how much?

I find the word used most by insecure audiophile types trying to justify their purchasing decisions.

Now you could attempt some objective, measured, definition of neutrality. But I find that one tough as well. Take two amps, both measure exactly the same but one has 1% second harmonic distortion and the other has .3% 9th harmonic distortion. Well the first should be considered more accurate. But wait a minute, the work of Jean Hiraga and others has repeatedly shown that the ear finds higher order, and odd order, distortion much more jarring to the ear. So the first amp may measure more accurately, but the subjective opinion might be that the second is subjectively more accurate as it does less violence to the fabric of the music.

Mopman, no need to make this personal.  Let's keep this civil.  If you have something bothering you it's probably best to save the drama for Dr. Phil.
Al wrote,

"I did not and do not express any opinion about the effectiveness of shielding with respect to magnetic fields. I don’t feel I can comment on that question in a knowledgeable manner without devoting more time to studying it than I care to devote."

No problem, Al. But that’s what the discussion happens to be about. I hate to judge too quickly but it appears I'm the only one here with actual experience in controlling magnetic fields, the induced magnetic fields in cables, power cords and transformers.  
Geoff I use mu metal in my system and have mentioned it several times here over the years. So you are wrong again there.

I suspect many others actually understand as well. Mu metal has been around for many years and its uses are well documented.

Back to the topic of neutrality, I agree shooting for neutrality is a good thing. Lab measurements are a useful tool. Lower noise and distortion is always better. How one connects to the music emotionally and why is a very subjective thing. Neutrality may or may not be part of that.

Regarding my own voyage along these lines, I feel I have achieved a good place in regards to neutrality and low noise and distortion with greatly diminishing returns for pushing any more forward there. I am interested in other approaches now and comparing. Ones that are more purely "subjective" in terms of being able to connect to the music. I have a pair of decent efficiency speakers (Triangle Titus) that I would love to try of a low power and not necessarily expensive tube integrated amp. Something along the lines of GLOW Amp 1, Jolida FX10, or maybe Decware.

I’ll be replacing rotted surrounds on an old pair of Boston A40 speakers soon. I may try these as a stand in for the Triangles in order to free the Triangles up for a new system to experiment with. I have a large nicely finished but acoustically lively living room dining room area with no sound in it currently, and I’m thinking a small setup like this for more casual listening would work well.