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I look at my wallet first. No money there...no need to upgrade.
^ That's not proof. We'll just agree to disagree.
I wouldn't focus on sensitivity. I've driven 83dB sensitive loudspeakers with 20W tube amps and it just comes down to designing the crossover so that it is an easy load. It is trivial from a design standpoint. The reason the speakers were 83dB had to do with the target size and bandwidth.
Order of importance in my opinion:- Room- Speakers- Source- Everything elseYou could put the "best" speakers in the world in a crappy room and you'd still get sub-par sound. Room first, speakers second, source third, everything else next. I believe the room and speakers combined make up 95% of what we hear (or more). Feel free to argue that point if you must, but that's my thought process. Just my $0.02
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.
HiFi in the strictest sense is no parking place for rose colored glasses.
I couldn't disagree more with that statement. There's not a clean home circuit in any home. Every motorized appliance is injecting garbage into the circuit and it shows up at your system. Anyone who has power conditioning in their system will attest to it's effectiveness in lowering the ground noise which in turn will allow more music to be heard. This is a well known fact to many audiophiles.
^ Could be, sure, if in fact there is a problem at all. The tricky part is factually measuring to see if there is a real problem (actual measured noise), then listening unbiasedly to determine if the measured "problem" is also an audible one. Battery power is neat, but probably not plausible for most. I bet its costly too. If there is a problem with grounding or excessive noise, fix that problem; don't cover it with a band aid and hope it heals itself. A power conditioner won't work in many scenarios, such as a when the power conditioner is only isolating the hot and neutral wires. Many circuits are connected to the grounding conductor and not the neutral, so what if the ground is causing the problem? In that case the power conditioner will do nothing. No matter what you believe, if you do NOT have a noise issue (that you can actually hear), then you don't NEED a power conditioner. They are to be used if, for instance, a light switch dimmer or refrigerator is causing an actual audible noise. No noise = no power conditioner necessary. Personally I think people "hearing a difference" is true, but its due to cognitive dissonance and not due to an actual change. I mean no offense, by the way. You guys give your opinions and I'll give mine, but I'm siding with science on this one.