So true!  Even in racing.  I attended a driving school with my 99 Miata a few 
years ago.  At the end of the course, my instructor drove my car on the 
autocross course and beat my best time by almost 5 seconds on his first try.  A 
lesson learned that is applicable in many life experiences.
Luke Zyla
On Aug 14, 2011, at 1:18 PM, William Schaffer wrote:

> We did an experiment like this many years ago. It was during a summer
> program  that Wally Easter was holding at VA Tech and we consistently
> identified the horn as being the horn commonly used by the player,
> regardless of what horn they were actually holding. While having quality
> equipment  that matches your sound concept is extremely helpful, at the
> end of the day it's not the car - it's the driver. 
> 
> Bill Schaffer
> 
> <<On Sat, 13 Aug 2011, Ken Pope Wrote:
> 
> <<That was one of the goals of my blind taste tests at the IHS a few
> years 
> <<back.  We could all hear the different players,,, but we all
> disagreed upon 
> <<which horns they were playing....
> 
> 
> 
> Dr. William R. Schaffer
> B.M.E., M.M., D.M.A.
> Associate Professor Horn/Theory
> Department of Music
> Auburn University
> Auburn, AL  36849-5420
> [email protected]
> http://www.auburn.edu/~schafwr
> Studio - (334) 844-3187
> 
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