Alas, this is true of many audiophiles.
We must be careful what we ask the mirror.
Many higher end preamps are dated and ugly, why is this?
Conrad Johnson, BAT, VTL are all very good preamplifiers, they are dated and just ugly. Audio research is a prettier amplifier but it's not very well regarded due to it sounding more like a solid state, ie. Not really a tube preamp despite all those internal lightbulbs.
Cheaper preamps can be more pretty. Schitt makes a pretty preamp for about $1000. People like pretty.
D'Agostino by many is viewed as very attractive but kind of weird.
http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews/canary4/903.html
Check that one out all high performance design in four chassis true dual mono |
Looks are important. Surely speakers are most prominent and the most important visual. Personally, I find most box speakers somewhat unattractive. At least the square box ones. Sonus Farber has sculpted boxes which are very aesthetic pleasing. For box components, I have always liked AR. They are always substantial looking. But when it comes to performance of any speaker of component, if they sound good they become good looking… sort of. |
My last pre with digital volume was a McCormack , and while it was good I missed the traditional rotary volume knob. I like tactile switches , buttons, knobs. My preamp has way more functionality than it's looks suggest . It has conventional controls, remote vol, mute, and Mono, it can drive 2 stereo amps via RCA and 2 via XLR , HT passthrough, plenty of inputs. Unreal sound quality ..... that was a good buy |
Pre-amps are engineering products built to do a job. For most that job is not to look beautiful. As most here have said, the important job is to process signals accurately and without unwanted artifacts. ARC epitomises that, having sold amps for more than 60 years that all look pretty much the same externally. I have no issue with that. It cements brand image. The visual aesthetics are entirely functional, but excellently executed in terms of materials and build quality. In fact I like it. What we really don't need is bling for the sake of bling. Amplifiers are not art objects. D'Agostino falls for that, although he didn't when he ran Krell. And he's certainly not the worst. But let us be thankful the bling hasn't gone as far as it has in turntables, where nearly all high-end units are grossly over-designed, over-weight and over-priced. For goodness sake, all they have to do is spin a record. |
Sandthemall has some really interesting comments. What an interesting occupation which I guess is designing how things look. And with so many really amazing looking things out there you would think the attractiveness of how things look would lure people in and make them feel good before they purchase and would entice audio component manufacturers to step their game up. People who buy audio equipment do have a sense of taste and are not all resigned to say only the sound matters. So manufacturers do not invest in the appearance of the product and there are exceptions of course. We all have our superficial side and a side of substance and many of us are interested in the quality of components. So how much are they really spending on what goes inside the box, how much can they get away with by diminishing the Quality of the inner workings of audio gear. we can see the exterior of audio gear and the lack of functionality Of the remote control at times which is incredibly annoying. but How do we know what’s going on inside the box. How much are they spending on all the parts, how much are they getting away with. Attenuators, capacitors, wiring connections, Transformers, cabinets, etc, there is limited information on all this when you read about what you’re going to purchase aside from everything you’re reading that most do not understand. My guess is that the electrical parts inside the box are less than 10% of the sales price. How often do you read in marketing descriptions proclaiming which parts are really fantastic and have cost a lot of money for the manufacturer. And when you do see a cost referred to it’s not very much in the scheme of things and what about the other things. It’s all touted as something wonderful as if something is being sacrificed by the manufacturer in making a product, how thankful we should be - if I’m spending North of $10,000, 15,000 or $20,000 I would hope they’re spending good money on the materials.
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