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Niteshade, I hope you don't mind me postingin this thread but I just wanted to add some personal thoughts on the subject. Everything you mentioned I agree with. Synergy is a key element when putting a system together. Where others may not agree with me........... I think all the components within a system are critical. I truly beleive in the "weakest link" way of thought. Yes, your speakers must synergize with your amplifier but if you don't have a preamp that is up to the task in front of that amp, it's all in vain. If you have all the right pieces together, amp, preamp and speakers, but have a source component that sounds like crap, the rest of that "great system" is only going to show you how bad that source component is.Example: I have worked very hard to put together a reference system in our showroom. Everything works great together so our platform is set. I can take an inferior CD player and install it and all of a sudden, that great presentation is gone. Put the reference digital playback back in and we are back to great sound........ install a cheap preamp...... back to bad again. Even the little details come into play. Tubes, cabling, etc. Even my mood (state of mind) can have an effect on how much I can appreciate things at any given time. I don't think a system's components should be broken down into "priorities". In the end, it comes down to the sum of the complete package.
In many cases the speaker choice can make a worthwhile difference for the amplifier by presenting a more benign impedance curve, or a more efficient load, or by enabling the use of amps that might not otherwise have been possible (specialty tube amps, low-powered Class A solid state amps, etc.). I've had the good fortune of showing with some very nice tube amps at audio shows, and as a result my speakers undoubtedly got more credit than they deserved... but at least the use of such amps was feasible. In a rock band it's usually the lead guitar that stands out and gets the most attention and is the most memorable, but often it's the bass player backing him up that makes him sound so good. Likewise, often there's a really good amp backing up that good sounding pair of speakers. Speaking of which, if you haven't clicked on the link in Nightshade's signature yet, go back and do so. I found this page especially interesting.
From a pychological point of view, the further up the chain the harder it is to listen through a components failings. For me it's simple and obvious. The most important component is the one that is closest to the media. Try a system with one good interconnect in it and the rest average, put the good one in from the source and listen then try it from pre to power and see which sounds best?
I couldn't agree more with your "weakest link" approach Bill which brings me to what I believe is the foundation of any system and that's power conditioning. W/o clean power, no system regardless of it's hype can truely live up to it's potential w/o cleaning all the crap that is in everyone's home circuits. My personal feelings is system synergy starts with the outlet. If you don't have clean power to start with, any upgrade is a mute point IMHO. If your whole system is battery powered , please disregard this post. Cheers,Robin
I prefer to think of noisy power coming into your system as the equivalent of tying one hand behind your back and engaging in a boxing match. There are systems, that even with one figurative hand tied behind their back, will still beat the crap out of a lesser system with the best power conditioning available. I prefer to put my money into the equipment that reproduces the music on my recordings first and worry about my power conditioning second. The cleanest power in the world won't make a mediocre circuit sound like circuit that has a superior design. Scotty
Now that I agree with. If the circuit is bad, fix it. A power conditioner will not "fix" it.