How much does your system retail for?


$23,000 - $24,000 I estimate. (Two channel, this does not include TV, VCR, etc.)

Please, keep the exagerations to a minumum, do not count CD's, equipment you have bought and sold, is packed away that you don't use anymore, etc..

Put the total first so it shows up at the begining of your post.

This is just for fun and curiosity of the diversity on here, don't take it to seriously. Simply evaluate what the retail value of your system is.
brianmgrarcom

Showing 5 responses by biomimetic

Cool site actually:

westegg.com/inflation/

if you want to see how much you vintage gear would cost now.

You want to know why I hate people who name drop about VAC or BAT or whatever on 'gon? Take a look - it tells you how meaningless their $75,000. system is in real market terms. It's amazing how much designers have forgotten, though some things have improved.

Vintage Yamaha Integrated (1978) w/ two 3 way adjustable phono's - $600. ($1828. 2005 dollars)
Paradigm Monitor 7 v.2 Speakers w/PDR 10" Sub - $1170.
Grado Red Phono Cartridge- $120.
Spacedeck w/10" Spacearm v.1 - $3000.
Cary Rocket 808 v.1 - $2850.
JVC DVD player - $220.
Audio Experience Symphonies - $400.00
Harmonic Tech Cords - $420.
RiverCable Speaker Cords - $220.
Kenwood Tuner/Integrated - $300. in '74 ($1247. in '05)
Cart - $85.
Racketballs - $20.

So... about $12,000., depending on how you look at it... of course in reality I think I paid $5600., total, so you know, it's a Soprano-style deal.
And you of course have a room and electrics that are built to suit the special needs of your very specialized and expensive gear...
It's not sarcasm to point out that a $60,000 system can sound like a sony boombox in a bad room with crappy electrics. And I've seen some of the "All out assaults" on 'gon. A $5,000 system in a good room can beat that $60,000 system every time if it's in a gymnasium or other highly reflective room.
I have a used turntable. It's a Spacedeck. But man, don't be so down on your system. I really like Arcam's. And a $2000 system is more than I ever thought I would spend on something I dearly love - music and my listening tools.
I've actually come to the conclusion it's more how much can you get for your money, rather than how much did you spend. Most people don't have the space for a $60,000. but will cram it into a really bad room anyway. And guess what? It doesn't sound like it did at CES in that room the seller spent three days prior to the show treating. It kind of levels the playing field. There's still alot of difference -a transformer with a rhodium or silver coating in the winding is going to sound a lot better, or a handmade paper air core. Things that are exotic are expensive. But in real world conditions how noticeable is it really? And are you a crazy headphone guy who's going to sit there and listen for it? A $1000. pair of headphones will always beat the best speakers in the best room - there's less air to move around, there's the purity of the electrostats, and the acoustic problem is essentially nil. This is why audio engineers still use them. I also have found a lot of older gear has better transformers and internal architecture for phono's and tuners. So use them. Kudos on that Luxman. So you upgrade to an EAR at some point if you really like it, or you move on having had nearly the same experience. Buy a $100-200 worth of room treatments or packing materials that work as room treatments for $50. A good silver/copper cable between an integrated and your primary piece of gear can help a lot as well for $150. And put $24. worth of rubberized plastic Vibrapods under stuff, or a couple of racketballs. Then go do the calculation on a currency converter to see what it would be in today's dollars if you're broke and want to feel rich. It's what I used to do.