Can an “audiophile” ever be satisfied with a system?


After I finally found a great used Woodsong Garrard 301, I was inspired to upgrade my entire system.
After 49 years of building up, am I finally off the merry-go-round??
Or are the improvements never-ending??
Now coming a new Triplanar tonearm, SRA platform for the 301 and Stillpoints for the preamp.
What’s left? New cartridge? New TV? Think the clearly endless quest is buying LPs!
Hope I am satisfied. Got a lot of great deals on new and used stuff but adding it all up puts me up to over $100K!
mglik

Showing 2 responses by hilde45

OP, Interesting question which really is very psychologically particular to you. Not knowing you, here are a few takes:

One is that you have to stay on the Merry Go Round because you seek Nirvana and since you’ve never been to Nirvana, you can’t know what it sounds like. You’re on an asymptote. It won’t end.

Another is that as you’ve grown, you’ve learned and because you’ve learned, you’ve realized how much more there is to know and experience. Something Millercarbon said in this regard made me think that we’re not "trapped" in some kind of circle but are rather on an evolving spiral. The question he raises (I think) is, "Are you learning to listen?" Because if you’re not doing that, then you’re really just a shopaholic and that is a non-evolving circle.

Some with this hobby just seek out "flags" to wave. Once they find a brand of speaker, amp, etc. they just decide it’s "the best" and then it becomes the magic word answer to about half the questions. In other words, for some, the question of "Am I there yet?" is answered by a brand.

Then there is Steve Guttenberg’s answer -- which I really like. He says that the quest for the "best system" is a mistake. It’s better to seek a "good enough" system ("good enough" to sink you into the music) and then if you’re feeling antsy, to realize that boredom may not be dissatisfaction with one’s system, but a desire for a different sound. Some nights we eat Italian, other nights Chinese food, etc. In other words, hearing music with different gear (or tweaks, cables, etc.) adds "variety" and not "betterness." Variety is the spice of life.
@mijostyn Well, we should agree to disagree -- I see no reason that one (with the means) would not want to haul out, say, electrostatic speakers and amps for a few months and then put those away for "box" speakers and their amps. To move between different style  DAC's, too. Not all parts of the system would be swapped out for variety's sake, but the notion that this idea isn't a reasonable one for some seems wrong. I think Guttenberg is on to something, though it's not how I roll....now.