Gee, guys, I really didn't mean to come off as a measurement freak - I'm actually pretty close to the fringes of the subjective camp on this stuff: trust your ears, and don't let anyone tell you that you can't :-)
As an example, I had a marathon session this afternoon where I tried seven different sustain blocks in my bass (really). Now, part of me thinks it would be interesting to look at the effects on a spectrum analyzer or something, but I immediately have to ask myself what I could conclude from that. How would I know which curves or distributions actually sounded 'better', whatever that means to me?
Yes, Hirsch was a bozo (or maybe, Bose-oh?). Yes, 20 years later people are still figuring out how to get better sound out of CD's, and still can't figure out how to quantify it. And yes, I wasn't the one to mention measurements in the first place...
At the same time, there are some things we seem to have a fairly good understanding of. For instance, if we agree on the testing conditions, it appears we can generally produce reliable and useful measurements of amplifier power. So if you show me one amp that comes fairly close to doubling output as it goes from an 8 to 4 to 2 Ohm load, and a second amp that does only a little better into 4 and is not recommended for 2 or perhaps specifies a minimum of 2.8 or something - then all other things being equal, I'll take the first one, thank you.
Damping factor seems to be a somewhat less precise measurement, but there does seem to be fairly strong subjective correlation between significantly higher numbers, and tighter bass reproduction. Personally, this is a number I would look at, but not trust as much as a carefully specified power measurement.
And I agree completely that there are other really critical factors - I couldn't possibly tolerate a fan, for 'domestic use' (which is all I care about at this time).
-Bob