How much do I need to spend to make vinyl sound better than digital?


All,

I have a solid vinyl setup that I like to think of as entry-level “plus:” Project Debut Pro with Sumiko Moonstone cartridge.  I enjoy vinyl for the ritual but find that my digital gear - a $400 ifi streamer and the AKM DAC built into my Anthem preamp - beats the analog rig in most ways.  Far better imaging/soundstage and much tighter bass without the occasional distortion/sibilance/warbling of the vinyl rig.  I haven’t messed with cartridge setup other than to check the factory-performed alignment, which looks perfect.  The table is perfectly balanced, counterweight set correctly with an electronic scale, etc - so I have no reason to think there’s a setup problem.  
 

Is this par for the course for this level of vinyl gear?  What do I need to spend to get my vinyl gear to match the performance of decent digital?  I’m thinking of upgrading to a Clearaudio Concept, perhaps with a Hana SL cartridge, but I want to make sure doing that is going to deliver a fundamentally different experience than what I have right now with the Project/Sumiko combination.

 

No interest in flame wars or rehashing the vinyl/digital debate.  I know vinyl can sound wonderful and am simply trying to decide whether I can afford the price of entry for a system that can gets the basics right (no audible distortion/sibilance, decent imaging).  I thought the Project/Sumiko would have gotten me there, but for whatever reason it hasn’t fit the bill.Thanks for any insights. 

lousyreeds1

@macg19 

PM sent! 

“I'd devote my limited budget into one source, get that to whatever my reference quality is, then perhaps work on the second source”

@sns 

Solid advice! 

So where’s the OP. Comments/suggestions made, questions to the OP asked and, nothing but crickets 

Vinyl sucks because it limits your choices.  If you're lucky to get a good digital quality recording streamed it's OK infinite choices.

Spending more money as a rabbit hole.  You'll never get an answer to this question.

 

No such thing imo, most difference is due to mastering, and vintage records which were mastered really well. What you can try to is to get on par with your digital. But it’s gonna be more expensive, digital is much more affordable now to  get to a good level.