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Because it never leads anywhere productive and always ends the same way...
Expensive, inexpensive, neither is really the issue. What I think is being asked is simple enough. Is this product priced according to parts cost, etc. or is the price more of a test to see what the market will bear?
Q: What if someone came up with the greatest amp circuit ever. What would that be worth?
A: Whatever the inventor thinks it is.
There is intellectual intangible goods being traded here. You cannot look at the material parts and base the price just on that. There is a bit of art in there.
Does Lamm market? I don't consistently read the print mags, so I don't know.Owning the baby Lamm preamp, I'll testify they know what they're doing. Build quality and sound are both killer.
A: Whatever the inventor thinks it is.No, whatever someone will pay. Which only goes so far, because then it's a question of, how many do you want to sell?
So you don't think what the inventor thinks its worth is the max he thinks someone wil pay?
Much as we might like to think so, they are not works of art -- they are appliances.
Hmmm . . . I'm with George. Have fun kids!
Is "what's in the box?" the force in question or does some other influence come into play?I think the industry has been taught by consumers to charge ever more for their goods. We have shown them that we believe more money equals better. So they charge more money, we pay it gleefully and then we add the object to our shrine. People object to this topic because it threatens to undermine the lie we are telling ourselves about how this stuff matters and how it has intrinsic value. We obsess and objectify what are, in essence, appliances. .....