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One man's hifi is another man's mid-fi.I remember years ago, in the newsletter Audio by Van Alstine used to put out, there was the following guide to how to tell if a person's sound system was "good enough": When you go to their house, is the sound system usually on, or usually off? If it is usually on, it is probably good enough; if it is usually off, it probably isn't. This hobby is full of people who spent megabucks on their setup and don't enjoy it any more than someone who spent a moderate amount- because they are too busy obsessing over whether they got their money's worth. Spend what is a reasonable amount to you for what you want to buy, do your "homework" as best you can, take your best shot, and play some music....
remember years ago, in the newsletter Audio by Van Alstine used to put out, there was the following guide to how to tell if a person's sound system was "good enough": When you go to their house, is the sound system usually on, or usually off? If it is usually on, it is probably good enough; if it is usually off, it probably isn't.
Please define mid-fi from hi-fi? Is it subject to cost or actual perfornance, or is it name cache or better said, snob appeal!
It's important to get the definitions right first.What (for example) is an amplifier? Do you really actually need one? If you have a very efficient high-impedance loudspeaker, could you connect it directly to the output of your preamp? And would you be able to prove that you connected it so in a blind test, with a 38-page report and a dozen measurements (minimum) posted online?
Does it qualify as Hi-Fi or is it Mid-Fi?