What happened to all the highend stereo shops


What happened to high end stereo shops I mean real high-end stereo shops. I am 78, my father bought me my first stereo when I was 12, I have been hooked ever since. I remember the days when you can go to a nice audio store and not just audition what they had in the store but if you saw a couple of tuners, preamps or some cables that you liked, you could give them a blank check and take the equipment home to audition on your system. Bring one or both back Pay for what you want to keep or get your check back. I don’t understand how someone can buy an expensive piece of audio equipment and not audition it in their system first. Many places today, you buy it and your stuck with it. OH yes you can sell it on Audiogon or eBay. Reviewers are nice and give good reviews but the problem I have is the equipment they are auditioning  is on their system in their treated music room which is going to be different than what you have. 
 

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@crlambert 

Yawn…ok then, did you get kicked out of another forum on the internet and somehow found Audiogon? Are you just killing time here until you are sentenced for your role on Jan 6? When you were reading the first ammendment, did your lips get tired?

 

When the time comes? Just remember, 100% of those who have predicted the end of the world have been incorrect.

 

This is a great topic. I’m 48 and I think I missed the era of borrowing new equipment.  However, I have a friend who is a sort of concierge for used audio equipment. I’ve been able to demo products and learn a great deal about audio. It has helped me immensely in finding a system - both new and used - that fits my many constraints.
Could this issue of purveyors and inventory also be due to the range of brands and manufacturers of equipment these days?  It seems I’m always running across a new brand or breakthrough technology.  Could this coupled with price also drive us to make an internet purchase?  How did shops back in the day handle this issue?  Or did they have to?

I was in college in the 1970s.  I was using photography for income shooting sports for the local newspaper so that I could eat.  We had a few camera shops in town but I found that I could mail order gear at a 30% discount at the time.  As I developed a rapport with these shop owners- buying film, paper and chemicals from them I could sometimes get a good discount on gear from them- but not always.  My best over the counter purchase was an electronic flash with a one year replacement warranty.  It was not professional grade- ie not for everyday use.  I would wear the flash out in about 6 months.  The shop owner replaced it for me over the counter, no problem for about two years.  I miss those relationships.  A few years later I walked into a camera store and offered the owner cash at a discounted price for a lens.  He kicked me out of his store.  Gotta take the bad with the good.

I miss all the stereo shops and camera shops but we all got what we deserved.  We chose discounts over personalized service.  My biggest frustration is it takes me an extra 20 minutes to search through the big box store looking for a schedule 40 elbow when back in the day all I had to do was walk into the hardware store, show the proprietor what I needed and he would get it for me.  Plus he would offer helpful advice on how to best complete my little project.  Looking back, all that helpful advice was priceless.

In Bloomington MN we have a high end audio store. I auditioned in a private room for an hour, treated like a king. He asked what system I had, about the room and speakers, my expectations for sound. About what I liked to hear, type of music. There sat 50k a pair speakers. I asked for something else more like my rather bright speakers. He connected paradyme $4500 / pair. I took home an integrated and on my system it sounded great. Nothing but a wonderful experience and top notch customer service.