shadow of a d said:
I agree, and have mentioned that, but I'm attempting to tackle the other angles that proponents have put forth.
There's really no other angles, just attempts to circumvent explanations in ever more grasping ways.
OK, so let's go one step further and look at the cause. What they are claiming is that
something emits ultrasound and that the recorder picks it up - ok, I'll buy that for now - and then during playback
without alteration, they are able to hear it - this is where my acceptance drops off.
Perhaps a poor quality device may be subject to slight distortion during recording/playback, but that's something you want to avoid when recording these things. The last thing you want is poor equipment giving false results - invalidating anything you collect.
The key point for you, would be the above. That equipment that doesn't reproduce the source sound,
as close to the original as possible (without distortion), is useless and invalidates results. If it picks up ultrasound, it must reproduce it as ultrasound. If it doesn't, it is skewing your results and invalidating them. You can certainly alter it on a computer to try and work with it, but a device doing it 'accidentally' is not acceptable for data collection.