ROI. Where is money better spent?
I was concerned that less expensive cables would vail or block some of a good preamps sonic performance.Regarding the correlation between cable price and cable performance, you may find this thread to be of interest. Good luck. Regards, -- Al |
Balanced components negate the need to some extent for jumping into the cable scramble. That's no small blessing. A setup guy I know with many years of experience tried Belkin XLRs across the room and wasn't sure there was much difference. Room treatment takes time IMO and there is no substitute for sitting and listening a few times to evaluate the effect. Personally I get the pre and play with the room indefinitely. Getting the reverb time down incrementally keeps you from going overboard on this and you have opportunities to sit and listen to the equipment as a bonus. |
Room treatment vs. speakers is kind of a chicken and egg. Good room treatment makes a room more speaker and sub, and genre and movie friendly. However you don't really know what the problems are until you get speakers. :) I will say that once you have good room treatment you will swap a lot of things except them. :) Best, Erik |
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Cables make a difference but the preamp is the most important piece to get right. Get the best preamp you can afford. If you have cables you can sell so you can spend more on the preamp, do that too. If you screw up on your preamp, you'll be spending a ton of money on cables to try and fix your mistake. It won't work, of course, so you might as well just do it right the first time. |
In all my testing, I would probably say the amplifier is the least impactful than any other component. A bad choice in amp can definitely cause your system to sound bad, but as long as you have a generally good choice, the differences between two amps are going to be less then the differences between two choices of preamps/source. The speaker is probably the biggest change, so make sure it's a speaker you generally like the sonic signature of. The preamp is important, but I would also say your source (DAC/turntable/etc) is also very important. One thing I have found is that if the sound quality / resolution is not there from the source, you are never going to get it back by putting in a super expensive preamp/amp. |
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I agree with ricred1 Preamp or DAC with preamp functionality. Get eh best source you can before all the other stuff. I build equipment and I make a DHT DAC and DHT preamp. As good as the preamp is in comparison to every preamp I have compared it to, the DAC make much more of an overall improvement. The DAC changed the sound in every system we have auditioned it in much more than the preamp did. Happy Listening. |
First step in good room treatment is setting up your system within the room (how far your speakers are from your wall, how far apart they are from each other, and how far they are from you). This all depends on the room dimensions. After placement, room treatment usually means adding acoustic paneling to absorb certain sounds (think how an empty room echoes when there is no furniture or no drapes on the walls) and acoustic diffusers to disperse the reflection of music in a way that adds positive resonance and complexity of the sound in the room (like a bookshelf, where if sound hits, it bounces it countless directions). Much room treatment can be started with the furniture and living things you have on hand, but there are also audiophile treatments you can add, like bass traps that absorb the bass in the corners of the room and bring clarity to the remainder of the frequency range. But @erik_squires is spot on - it doesn’t matter what components you improve first if the room is not set up well for it. Actually, there's another thread going on about this now: https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/for-a-quick-good-time-blankets |
@thiefoflight , @erik_squires Absolutely agree, no amount of $$$ spent on gear can overcome/compensate for poor setup and room treatment. Before spending even more money on another piece of equipment, get your current system to "play the room", and get your room treatments done to have the least detrimental effect on the sound. Buy Jim Smith's book "Get Better Sound", it is invaluable. Happy listening, peaceful listening, joyful listening! Tom |