Most non-fatiguing 2.0 nearfield setup for $1000


Hello everyone, first-time poster here. This might be a little lengthy, but I won't mind if you skip over it if you just want to recommend some laid-back speakers, a good amp, or a good dac that might be lesser known. Anything is welcome. Like the topic suggests, I'm trying to put together the most non-fatiguing setup (DAC+amp+bookshelves) that I can and my maximum budget is around $1000. My goal is to have something that's less fatiguing than silence. Okay, I'm kidding, but I'm just generally looking for something that's laid-back, warm, perhaps somewhat mushy is not a bad thing in my opinion. I realize that ultimately my own subjective listening will determine what's best for me, but any input would be greatly appreciated.

Right now I'm using an early 90's entry level Harmon Kardon receiver with JBL bookshelves that have gone through hell. I don't think it's bad, and many would probably enjoy it but I find it to be too fatiguing, even with some EQ applied. I find this setup to be too harsh for my liking, not terribly bad, but I'd rather give them to my parents or my sister if I can't enjoy it to its fullest.

Lately I've been considering a Peachtree Decco as my source. Perhaps I could stretch for the Nova but I'd rather not as money is tight. I'm not a tube person but whenever someone mentions "tube" there seems to be an unwritten rule that it's warm (not the tube getting warm, or maybe that's what they meant! ;_;), even if it may not be universally true. If getting a separate DAC, I don't mind USB or digital out, though I understand some (most?) onboard audio doesn't have the best digital out so I may need to get an inexpensive sound card for this purpose. In general, it seems to me that I should just go with whatever DAC is neutral, and I'd probably be pleased with an Emu 0404 USB. Cheaper internal audio cards like the Auzentech Forte and Asus Xonar Essence ST from what I've read may or may not have internal noise and may or may not be bright sounding.

If I had to get a separate integrated stereo amplifier, I might just go for something cheap like the Gizmo t-amp or something vintage off of craigslist. If you have better suggestions I'm all ears.

Speakers. Here's the fun part and probably most important from what I gather. Right now I'm looking at Ascend Acoustics CBM-170 SE, Energy RC-10, PSB Alpha B1, Av123/Onix X-LS and ELT525 (I think I might prefer the X-LS more), Triangle Stella, or whatever cheap Spendor bookshelves I can get my hands on in the US. I might even go for some Paradigm Atoms which seem to be all the rage these days though they're both "bright" and "not-so-bright". It's hard to go by such a subjective descriptor in my opinion, plus I don't know if people sometimes refer to their older Atoms which are supposedly nowhere near the new ones. Well, this is basically a summary of where my one month of research has led me. I hope I did not bore you, though I'm sure it did since I'm so green at this. Any input, criticism, commentary, answers, questions are appreciated. Thank you.

Oh, I almost forgot, but should I bother with tube buffers? I had no idea what the heck one of these things were until recently, so I have not yet been able to do much research but if anyone has anything to say about them, I'm eager to learn. Thanks once again.
yogaflame
System 1:
Musical Fidelity V-DAC (sweet) $299
Audioengine A5 powered speakers $325
Total system cost about $650 with shipping

System 2:
Cambridge Audio Dac-Magic (neutral) $425
Audioengine A5 powered speakers $325
Total system cost about $800 with shipping

System 3:
Music Hall DAC 25.2 (warm) $595
Audioengine A5 powered speakers $325
Total system cost about $1000 with shipping

I like making sure the front end is holding up its end of the bargain. The Audioengine's sound great and the better the feed, the better they sound.
More traditional systems:

System A:
Musical Fidelity V-DAC (sweet) $299
NAD C-315BEE Integrated Amplifier $349
PSB Alpha B1 Bookshelf Speakers $279
Total system cost about $980 with shipping

System B:
Musical Fidelity V-DAC (sweet) $299
Cambridge Audio Azur 340A Integrated Amplifier $349
Cambridge Audio S30 Bookshelf Speakers $219
Total system cost about $920 with shipping

System C:
Musical Fidelity V-DAC (sweet) $299
Fatman RED-i Integrated Amp w/Speakers and iPod Dock $599
Total system cost about $950 with shipping

I really recommend you check these out if possible. Great near-field listening for under a grand.
Thanks, I'll check those out. The Fatman RED-i Integrated Amp looks pretty damn cool, and I've never even seen it before.
For some time now I planned for my PC a pair of LS3/5A's, a nice D/A converter/preamp and a B&K ST-140. I recently heard a set of Michael Kelly-designed Peachtree D4's make LS3/5A's sound like a boom box by comparison. So convinced, I just finished putting this together:
$700 Peachtree Audio D4's canted back on Tiptoes
$170 ASUS Xonar Essence ST/STX soundcard
$150 (eBay) NAD 3225PE Integrated
Kimber PBJ's
Anticable's

It came in at a pinch over $1K. The system has been burning in a week now, and in the nearfield anyway, it is more transparent and revealing than my all-Arial main system based on 10T's. Not "sweet" so much as stunningly transparent and neutral, but not as a characteristic so much as a means by which the emotional content of the music is communicated, along with every vivid detail within. I wound up listening to all my fav recordings, some making me tear up afresh. I will likely upgrade the NAD one day to a B&K ST-140 and use the PC as a digital "preamp". (That'll yield some sweetness!)
PC USB out to HRT II+ DAC to NHT passive volume controller to HT M00 powered speakers. Compact, accurate, punchy, non-fatiguing and actually can image reasonably well flanking a double flat screen set up.