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Earl, I sort of agree with you on that. The Burson and JKenny Ciunas are fairly new additions to my system. I am thinking that I could get more resolution form a new preamp and a power amp upgrade would help. But since I have to pick one I would probably go for the power amp first. Cables are a pain as auditioning is a neccesity.
Can you give a bit more detail on the OB speakers?
I wanted a Plinius for a long time, then I saw the innards and the parts quality didn't appear to be consistent with the price. Consider amps such as Odyssey Stratos, Modwright, or Job.
Those are great suggestions.....but topology/design trumps parts quality. I think this goes without saying. One can throw a bunch of high end parts in a junky circuit and charge a bunch for it. This doesn't make it a superior piece of gear just because it has superior parts. In most cases, the really great gear designers out there will use more expensive parts (than truly necessary) ONLY if they enhance performance (ie enhance both sound quality AND/OR reliability).
I hear ya, but if I'm gonna spend $5,000 on an amp, I'd expect higher quality parts than ones found on a $500 amp, regardless of the circuit design.
+1 The parts in the signal path should certainly be better and/or should be implemented in some sort of clever / proprietary way. And to some extent, other functional parts, not necessarily in the direct signal path, should be a grade or two better as well, at a 10x price disparity. BUT, if a piece of gear sounds great and reliability isn't an issue with whatever parts it uses, then the designer's ingenuity and R&D time should be taken into account as well (in the price). What I'm getting at is that one shouldn't totally judge a piece of gear by just the sum of its parts. I think we can all agree on that.
Buying an amp is like purchasing a car -- the vast majority of automobile purchasers have no idea what's under the hood. Similarly, I don't have a clue about amplifier circuit design, so I have to judge an amp based on other factors, i.e., price, aesthetics, parts quality, customer reviews, customer service, features, warranty, etc. Almost none of these things have anything to do with what the amp sounds like, with the exception of parts quality. I recommended to the OP that he check out Odyssey and Modwright primarily because they actively participate on AudioCircle and that's a super huge benefit. Perhaps you can school us (or provide links) on how to compare amps based on the circuit design. I'd love to learn the basics, as long as it's not too technical.