Secondary listening systems


I't seems that many audio hobbyists have, besides their main listening room, other places in their homes set up for music also. Most of these seem to have small systems in their bedrooms or spare rooms. I'm one of these but my favorite second listening spot is in my garage and I like this little setup, at least for some music, as much as my living room system.

This setup consists of a laptop playing lossless files through iTunes. It is also the sync source to the Apple TV. The amp is a repurposed B&K AVR 307 that I used when I was into surround and at one time served as a power amp for a Rogue Audio preamp. The speakers are the tiny but very capable Monitor Audio Radius 90's. For light jazz and solo guitar this system is very easy to listen to.

My main system is Shanling CD player, Peachtree Nova as preamp, DBX graphic equalizer and Martin Logan Ethos speakers.

BTW, I'm sitting in my garage listening to an old Bob James CD and am so much enjoying what some might consider a minimalist system, that I just wanted to share.
broadstone

Showing 1 response by sfar

Good post. I have the same experience and probably spend considerably more time listening to my 2nd and 3rd systems than my main one.

The office system is mostly lossless files connected by Toslink from an iMac to a Simaudio 100D DAC, then to a Jolida EL84 tube integrated and on to a pair of JohnBlue JB3 speakers. Very satisfying sound in a nearfield situation and having immediate control over thousands of tunes, both from files on the hard drive and the world of music available online makes for interesting listening.

In the garage is a system that most here would consider low-fi, an old Airport Express getting the stream from the iMac in the house, an Audioengine D1 DAC, a DIY chip amp and a pair of Boston Acoustics speakers I rescued from a trash bin at work, total outlay less than $200. It sounds pretty damn good and makes working in the garage much more enjoyable.

If I'm playing music I love I can completely enjoy it almost anywhere, played through almost any system.