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I don't go looking for either "exotic or esoteric". I will admit, if all things are equal (sound/performance quality) I try to avoid exotic and go with gear built within my own shores. Its just my personal quirk, YMMV.I go looking (listening) for the best sound that my wallet can handle. I have found that to be found as much, if not more, dependent on the system synergy than $ spent. I have heard a collection of pricey components sound worse than mass produced mid-fi. We have all run into that. I have also heard systems done around vintage gear (Scott integrated) and inexpensive speakers sound terrific. Total outlay, maybe $600 with a used CD player. Was it the ultimate in resolution...no. Did it get you into the music and allow major enjoyment...yes.I probably have $15K total wrapped up in 2 different systems. I stopped at what I considered extreme point of diminishing return. There was a lot of steps through a lot of years to get to where I am. To do appreciably better, it would take close to twice as much money. Not worth it to me at that point. However, both tubed systems make me smile and tap my feet. Its not about the money (unless you are just looking for the Status Symbol). Its about enjoying the music.JMHOWalt
When did expensive hifi become a status symbol? Expensive houses, cars and watches are status symbols. Expensive hifi is misunderstood by most and dismissed by almost everyone else.If you tell someone you've spent 100k on a Porsche, they usually think you've got something on the ball. If you tell someone you just spent 60k on a piece of hifi gear they think you are an idiot.Why do these threads always go the same direction, that anyone that's spent more than a certain amount of money on hifi can't have any sense at all, just because it's something someone else can't afford? I'd love to have a new (or even slightly used) Bentley Continental. It's probably never going to happen. But I've driven them, they are awesome cars, way better than my used 3 series BMW and no less awesome just because I can't have one.Some of the ridiculously expensive hifi is also ridiculously good. (and some of it isn't) Sorry if you don't believe it.
When you get right down to it- a tube amplifier is exotic and esoteric to the general public. It is unusual and understood by few now days. Within a group of HiFi enthusiasts it's clearly neither exotic or esoteric. It's interesting to note that WalMart is carrying a tube hybrid amp for Ipods. A little exotic tech does draw in customers. A few folks touched down on what I was after: It is worth it to spend an incredible amount of money on audio equipment? Whether we can afford it or not is irrelevant. Do you really see a large performance difference between a $20K amp and a $3K amp, preamp, speakers, turnatble etc...? Is this difference enough to make the extra expenditure worth while?The question was spurred by the enormous amount of used gear on Audiogon that is very,very expensive. Maybe they need the money? That's fine. Maybe they found something much less expensive that does the same job? We know one fact from Audiogon: People are buying expensive audio gear. Allot of them are. The lists are just a small fraction of people buying it. Has to be!From what I have been directly told, HiFi gear is often thought of as a status symbol, just like a car or house.
Looking through the web over the years, I have seen tons of exotic/esoteric audio gear. There is plenty of stuff that has 5 & 6 digit price tags. Question is: Are there any benefits to spending at least $10k on any single item? I am being over generalized on purpose. What will going from a $5k to a $10k price tag bring to the table?
In my mind, based on the above, the question is kind of disingenuous.
Exactly. It is human nature. There will always be a jealousy or envy present. Sorry the truth hurts. The car analogy is a sound one. For the person who would love to own a Porshe Turbo and cannot afford it he modifies his car and gets close. Appreciates some of the performance but still not a Porsche. He would love to own one. However not finanially possible. It is all about the money. Now the other spectrem is the Audiophile who can assemble a fine sounding system on the used market. Just gotta know what your doing. A seasoned Audiophile would have a better chance with that situation. charles
But you can also but a damned fine 911 on the used market at a hefty discount. So cars, audio, boats, women (just kidding) can either be bought new at a high price or bought used at a discount. No difference.
Exactly. It is human nature. There will always be a jealousy or envy present. Sorry the truth hurts. The car analogy is a sound one. For the person who would love to own a Porshe Turbo and cannot afford it he modifies his car and gets close.
I like to buy good sounding, quiet, reliable, medium cost components that also have just a tiny bit of styling flair. I don't want to pay for over complicated machined masses of aluminum ala Bolder or Pass Labs, but instead the components should exude minimalist class. Silkscreened, engraved or etched legends on front and back panels are of course a must. Steve
And as for the mfr direct pricing vs the dealer channel, it's really a different game. If you want more bang for your buck, the mfr. direct route is an excellent way to go. But it is a different experience.