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While I have seen the value of botique upgrades in the analog world, in the digital world it makes much less sense. At least as a value proposition because even the most cheapo digital output is light years more accurate than a turntable or any of its analog brethren. The DAC is the new dog in the fight. For example, spending 500 or 1000 to upgrade the analog section and power supply of your SB make sense, and most people here seem to agree that if analog is your schtick, then the upgrade is worth it. When people start talking picoseconds worth of jitter or bit errors reading from the disc, you are really into the minutae of the audio sound by the time it hits your ears. Perhaps there is some gain to be had there, but I bet you could easily find another place to spend that grand or two in your chain. For example, the crummy room you are in from an acoustical standpoint.
And, while I don't want to turn this into a digital vs. analog debate; I will say that claiming that digital is more "accurate" is way off base depending on what you mean by accurate. I, as well as many many others, would certainly argue that digital can not match analogs natural timbre and more accurate portrayal of an instruments performance in a live event. Saying that even cheap digital is "light years more accurate than a turntable," is very misleading and completely unsubstantiated. If you disagree, we can gladly put a $150 CD player up against my modest TT setup and see how that statement holds up.
Unfortunately the CD player will be more "accurate" according to the meter brigade. The response is flatter, there is no rumble or wow and flutter, the dynamic resolution is potentially better on the high side, and more than likely the bass response is better. Now the highs will drop off quicker, but the meter brigade tends to ignore that.Notice I didn't mention sound. Ironically "accuracy" doesn't mean it sounds better.
I worked as a recording engineer at that studio and quite a few more over the next 35 years. I also had the very good fortune of working with quite a few other talented recording engineers during that time.The funny thing is, I don't recall recording engineers ever discussing the merits of this speaker cable or that, the value of cryogenics, boutique caps, special binding posts or anything of the sort. Don't get me wrong, we worked with some very good recording equipment. But my experience tells me that most recording engineers would take a rather dim view of some of the theories espoused in today's audiophile world.The thing is, these studios are often where the music is created in the first place. And the signals being processed are mic and line level for the most part - far more critical than speaker level signals. So the basic question I ask is, if these issues are not that critical in the recording process, why would they be more important in a relatively simple playback system - a system designed to reproduce the same signal being recorded in the first place?- Jim
It looks like we have regressed back to the days of Stereo Review and Julian Hersch where conventional wisdom suggested that speakers should be at least 50% of one's total stereo budget, all amplifiers sound the same, turntables and tonearms have no affect on sound. Seems clear there is an agenda going on here...just an observation.
I believe that a well designed speaker should be able to easily reveal differences in source components, amplification and cables. Therefore, a less than stellar source will produce less than stellar sound. GIGO. I'm not suggesting that a less than stellar speaker with expensive sources and amplification is a wise decision either. There needs to be a balance without placing disproportionate empasis or expenditure in any one area. This includes cables too.
Has anyone, anywhere, ever done a blind test between speaker wire and been able to tell the difference? For example $2000 speaker wires vs $10 Monoprice 12 AWG.I would love to be convinced that speaker wire makes a difference (I'm currently considering upgrading my Monoprice wire to something nicer (~$100), though at this point it's purely for aesthetic reasons). Seems like it wouldn't be that hard to do the test. If a speaker wire has certain sonic characteristics shouldn't it be easily identifiable by just listening?