I wish Frank would let us know what he really thinks.

Maybe these next 2 comments are somewhat off topic.
At RMAF I was in a room with 8-1/2' tall linesource's; 40 drivers, cabinets, etc. that cost $6000. Right between them was a 4' stereo rack, $4500!

A while back on the Audio Central thread a guy made his first post here saying he really liked his music and asked for help in assembling his first stereo. I would say that is a simple question. If your budget is set for quite sometime, around 1/2 for speakers and.......If you're going to continue to put more money into the set, get as much speaker as you can, knowing that as you upgrade the electronics it will sound better and better. Of course matching the power requirements of the speakers to the electronics. And then your in business LISTENING to the music you love. Well, the poor guy. There were comments such as "I build my system around my interconnects", must be Class A, must be digital, must use balanced IC's, ( w/no question of the location of the components to each other), power conditioners, you start by building a new house...........There is just so much "majoring in the minors".
So JP, there is hope for regular guys, I consider myself regular, not normal, but regular.

By the end of this year I'll have spent $11k (yes, a HUGE chunk of change for us regular guys) and except for a $250 DVD/CD changer, have a completely new system. And what about that ratio I suggested to the new poster on Audio Central: 51% for the speakers, 49% amp, preamp, dac, cables, 2 pair NOS tubes, and a stock SqueezeBox (to come).
I was told before my trip to RMAF that I would REALLY appreciate how good and what a bargain Frank's gear is after attending. That was even simple for my non-audiophool wife to see and hear. The same with the Salk HT3's we purchased.
I think I'm a born-again cynic, at least when it comes to high-end audio. I believe Frank could spend a few hundred bucks on thick faceplates, definitely some "cool colored lights", maybe some spikey feet, and a completely different marketing approach, double or triple or quadruple his price and make more money. Suddenly his gear would be much better to many but unattainable by us regular guys.
Many are into all this for the gear, the pursuit, the rush of a new purchase, the latest hype, the specs, and of course the "mines bigger than yours", and there are plenty of entrepreneurs to meet their "needs".
There are also the Frank's, and Jim Salk's, and Danny Ritchie's, and Rick Craig's, that love the music so much they want others, like us regular guys, to be able to afford to do that with very musical gear.
This was a complete politically incorrect rant and it felt good.

It is about the music, isn't it?