Are audiophile products designed to initially impress then fatigue to make you upgrade?


If not why are many hardly using the systems they assembled, why are so many upgrading fairly new gear that’s fully working? Seems to me many are designed to impress reviewers, show-goers, short-term listeners, and on the sales floor but once in a home system, in the long run, they fatigue users fail to engage and make you feel something is missing so back you go with piles of cash.

128x128johnk

Showing 2 responses by cleeds

Yup, it's a bloody conspiracy, for sure. It's amazing that you figured it out. Congrats!

What do you plan to do next?

johnk

... why are so many upgrading fairly new gear that’s fully working? ...

Some people enjoy swapping equipment around. It's not my thing, but it doesn't concern me that others enjoy it. I think it mostly a stereotype, though. Most audiophiles I've known tend to keep their gear for a long time.