Joe Gramm wrote:
So the argument you'll get is:
...but the files before and after conversion are exactly the same
...but even though the file are exactly the same, I can still hear a difference.
You have to be very cautious about 'I can hear a difference'. When Dolby A noise reduction was first introduced, a leading record critic claimed he could hear degredation on the sound. Dolby invited him to a demo, and played him a tape with Dolby A processing, and another of the same recording without it. He was quite definite that the latter sounded better.
Then they told him that the unprocessed tape had been copied from the Dolby A tape after playback through the processor. He left in a huff, but it rather demonstrates the point about thinking you hear what you expect to hear.
Similar problems arise with expensive speaker cables and other tweaks particularly those that take some time to implement, causing a long delay between samples.
And there was once a recording device which was taken to live demos, where playback of a recording of a live person, and the live person himself, were done behind a curtain to an audience who all swore they couldn't tell the difference.
This was in the 1890s and was the Edison Phonograph.