0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 14599 times.
Yeah, change the fomula to fit what the op wants to hear. No problem.Then I too have 50% speaker 50% amp.Happy?Then another 50% preamp. the a second preamp I use as a fancy tube buffer list $4,000 includes another $1K in mods.. So that is 50% too.Another preamp I use for it's great phono section, that was list $6,000 so another 50%Then $5,000 worth of turntable so another 50%$5K for the digital stuff another simple 50%Then $5,000 worth of power conditioners and yet another 50%So I am glad i am in agreement: 50% for speakers LOL
My 26 year old MG3a's are probably not worth $500, however I just got to audition the new $46,000 Wilson Alexia's last night. I loved them. But when I got home and turned on my $500 speakers, I did not feel bad at all. In truth I actually preferred a few things on my Maggies.The Wilson's ruled on dynamics, treble, ability to play loud, midrange and palpable presence. I preferred the depth, soundstage and believe it or not the bass on my old guys. (The room was god awful in all fairness to the Alexia's)
Absolutely...you don't need to spend a ton of money to get musical enjoyment. A well executed reasonable system will beat out aa high priced system not used to its full advantage any day.
It was a general question..I believe it is not meaningless..I was trying to get a feel for how much individuals put towards their speakers out of a total system investment..Which I found these responses quite adequate. Of course there will be inputs that skew the scale but again I was just looking for an average.. If you want to lay out an itemized list of components and cost fine, this would make the comparison even more meaningful..I just thought considering the large investments some make,, some people would not be comfortable with that.I am assuming most people have a reasonably balanced cost system, and do not pair $50,000 speakers with $500 amps, which would make the percentage meaningless... So in this context the actual dollar value is irrelevant. If I asked you how many slices of pizza you ate you would not need to tell me the cost of the pizza for me to understand the concept of what percentage of the pie you ate. Greg
Next time try staying on point when you answer and your post won't be meaningless. If all items were bought new in one purchase and is still intact as such then there would be some sense to your question and maybe even the attempts to answer. Is there a problem pairing $50,000 speakers with a $500 amp other than a case of too much money and too little gray matter? One more time, 60% of 100% is 60%, 60% of $100 is $60, the two aren't related unless made so. And, now to what makes your post meaningless, if I cut a pizza four ways and another sixteen and tell you I ate four pieces what percentage of the pie did I eat?