Aging technology versus inevitably aging ears...


This could get long; please pardon me in advance or skip it. I had originally meant this for the Digital Forum, but it grew and meandered to where I just cut and pasted here... I have a large house with many rooms and, to my wife's constant objection, a well-displayed system in most of them ranging in vintage from 1976 to 2010. Each is period correct in that the turntable, electronics, and speakers are approximately age-matched. I'm old-school, so my speakers are big and beautiful-- two channels only and no subwoofers needed. Over the past few days, I've had the house to myself and a chance to do some listening to my vinyl, my better FM tuners, and even my CDs, which I normally consider a convenience medium for background or entertaining. I have absolutely nothing against digital and will admit that good digital sounds sufficiently good that it could actually provide a primary source if my LP collection melted and analog broadcasting were terminated (perhaps that's somewhere in the health care bill?), although mediocre digital is at best rather fatiguing.

My classic electronics and loudspeakers have been on a program of refurb for the past several years just because I enjoy using them and do not wish to suffer progressive degradation in their sound and function. In fact, I was A/B/C-ing some of my early mid-fi CDPs and TOTL direct-drive turntables against modern ones on my high-resolution living-room rig and came to a shocking conclusion: Properly-functioning old gear does not sound bad at all. In fact, without naming names, some of my old MASH and bitstream players sounded good enough that I would not see any reason to upgrade them unless I had a digital-only rig. Again, I prefer vinyl for solo listening and have the CDPs primarily for socializing. Every five years or so, I match and build a newer system, but since I have lots of closet space and several of Billy Bags' wonderful racks, I just don't get rid of the old stuff.

Still awake? Up to now, I had been enjoying the advances in engineering provided by the upper end of mid- and lower end of hi-fi-- that sweet spot at the rational side of the 10/10 rule. I'm always prepared to get rid of all the stuff and build one dedicated system, but just never pulled that trigger. However, I'm now at the point where I'm not sure that further advances will provide me greater enjoyment in my second half-century. If the stuff that was good enough for me twenty years ago when I had to stretch to afford it sounds pretty darn good now, is it good enough? Yeah, right, only I can answer that for me, but I'm wondering if anybody else here has reached the point where he is listening and enjoying more than ever, but admits that the gear is probably good enough? Does anybody just plain get attached to it?
morgenholz

Showing 2 responses by islandmandan

I greatly enjoyed reading your thread, and it is quite pertinent to me. My 63 years have pretty well ravaged my hearing, but not enough yet so that I can't enjoy my system, which is now finally at the point I always hoped it would be.

I have, within the last year or so, gone backwards in time re my speakers, having gone from current model Dynaudio's, to 35 year old Tannoy drivers, which I have enjoyed designing the enclosures, then having them built, and building custom outboard crossovers for them. I have never enjoyed audio as much as I do now, the involvement in building some of it, and the enjoyment of listening after a year or better working on making it sound as I'd hoped.
I love this hobby, you get back what you put into it, (well, eventually!) My hearing isn't great, but I will keep on listening, even if I have to use the Braille method. I don't think it matters much what you listen through, as long as you enjoy it.

Regards,
Dan
Dear Morgenholtz, re-reading this thread reminded me that I used to drive those old 12" Tannoy's with a 45Wpc Kenwood integrated, with built-in phono stage (routine, back then), AR turntable, and Shure V-15 type IV cart. I recall being across the road from my place, about a quarter mile away, and heard Buddy Guy as clear as a bell (my friend was playing while I was cutting wood). Kind of amazing when I think back on it, just how good the old stuff could sound. Fond memories!

Regards,
Dan