a rant


after 30 years of being so enamored with stereo equipment - im ok now just listening to music

im no longer chasing - whenever i have bought new equipment it never sounded as good as i think the reviewer thinks it does. maybe 5% sounded really good and the other 95% - im still waiting for them to break in.

My fantastical brain wanted every piece of equipment to sound incredible. i think the key word is "chasing". 

See, now tube amplifiers are all the rage again - it was class d about 3 years ago - it was solid state about 6 months ago - whenever i have tubes - i want solid state, whenever i have solid state - then i want tubes - then ill try class d  in the meantime 

Im just saying - this hobby is the "space mountain" of roller coasters - ya think!

 

128x128smargo

I am not sure that audio was a hobby for me.

If i think about it my goal was not buying and trying gear pieces but succeeding with low cost system to reach complete satisfaction about sound and understanding how to do it.

Acoustics dont change with gear pricing scale...

I succeeded after many years...

I had no hobby it seems anymore... ( i changed 2 pieces of gear this month but it was necessary not an hobbyist action)

I am interested anyway by reading about audio and acoustics...I will call it one of my hobby anyway...devil

 

 

I listen music...

 

To stay in the mood of this thread , i suffered very badly without speakers for a month...

But take it with a grain of salt...

 

I agree with the idea that my audio journey is a hobby, and for the time being, I get great pleasure in learning from and engaging with the hobby; and that means spending money. I am not retired and can afford what I spend on audio, and for now the cost does not impact my life in a negative way. I'm adding upgrading a pair of speakers, a streamer, a DAC, and finishing a dedicated audio room.....which I may add home theater later.

Mahgister brought up Baach, and I will be spending a lot of time at Axpona with the folks from Theoretica and learning much more about the Baach systems. The ability (claims they can) to present most recorded music closer to how it is presented in a live performance, greatly intrigues me. Tom Martin from Absolute Sound recently made a written and Youtube review of the technology, and now I'm very curious.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxI6wf5TYTU

Thanks for the video...

 

 

 

Mahgister brought up Baach, and I will be spending a lot of time at Axpona with the folks from Theoretica and learning much more about the Baach systems. The ability (claims they can) to present most recorded music closer to how it is presented in a live performance, greatly intrigues me. Tom Martin from Absolute Sound recently made a written and Youtube review of the technology, and now I'm very curious.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxI6wf5TYTU

I've encountered some issues with the audio hobby, and if I were to list them out, they’d look like this:

  1. Lack of Progress: The audio industry hasn't made significant advancements over the years, especially when compared to the rapid progress in the video industry.

  2. Overpriced Equipment: Prices across the board are outrageous. I usually buy used gear to avoid this, but even basic items like cables, DACs, vinyl, and SACDs are overpriced—especially when you compare them to the affordability of 4K Blu-rays, projectors, and OLED TVs.

  3. Minimal Returns on Upgrades: Every upgrade feels marginal. I recently added an external SMSL DAC, which technically counts as an upgrade, but I see no reason to spend over $1,000 on a DAC—it’s just not worth it. On the other hand, when I upgraded my projector from an HD bulb to a 4K laser, the improvement was massive. I can easily tell the difference between an HDR 4K Blu-ray and a 1080p Blu-ray, but with audio, the difference is subtle—even when switching from Totem to Sonus Faber speakers.

  4. Human Hearing Limitations: Our hearing is inherently limited compared to our visual capabilities, which makes it harder to perceive these subtle audio upgrades—unlike the clear differences in video quality.

Overall, as someone interested in both audio and video hobbies, I sometimes feel like people are being ripped off in the audio industry. The returns on investment in audio are far less noticeable than in any other hobby.

@sheri2022

Those are great points. I would add auditioning is a giant pain. I can watch a tv at BestBuy, drive a car at a VW dealership but listening to a $2000 amp? I am not blaming it on anyone, but it slows down the process.