What were your humble beginnings on the path to high end audio?


Recently there has been a discussion as to the “price point where mid fi tops out and hi end systems begin”. I’d be willing to bet that there are not many folks who started out in this field of interest spending $100K, $50K or even $10K. Going back to your very beginnings, what was your first serious audio system?

I’ll jump in the wayback machine with Mr. Peabody and Sherman and give you a look at my beginnings.

My journey began at around age 13. I started out with a Lafayette KT-630, stereo tube amp that I built from a kit in my 9th grade, “electronics shop” class. The speakers were built at home from plans in the 1968, July issue of Mechanix Illustrated. I upgraded the cabinet construction from plywood, to solid mahogany. The twin woofers in each cabinet were also upgraded to 5” from the specified 4” units and the tweeters were also upgraded from the specified 2-3/4” units to the deluxe 3” units. The inductors in the 6db per octave passive crossovers were hand wound and the caps, terminal strips, L-pads, magnet wire and grill cloth were from Lafayette Radio Electronics as were the woofers and tweeters. The turntable was a purchased Garrard SL72B with a Shure M91E magnetic cartridge.

Check out the amp specifications on page 42 of the Lafayette 1968 summer catalog #648.
https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Catalogs/Allied-Catalogs/Lafayette-1968-Summer.pdf

The raw speakers are shown on page 55 of the Lafayette 1971 catalog #710. Woofers, 99-F-01554, figure D. Tweeters were at the bottom of page 55, 99-F-00499. The Garrard SL72B is on page 69 of the same catalog.
https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Catalogs/Consumer/Lafayette-1971.pdf

I still have the speaker systems and the amp and they all still work! Alas the SL72B is long since gone. I mowed a lot of grass and shoveled a lot of snow in the neighborhood to buy all that high end gear at age 13! :-D By todays standards, not very impressive, but to a 13 year old in 1968, it was awesome!

So to reiterate, what was your first serious audio system?

P.S. - If you are interested, check out some select old Lafayette, Allied Radio, Heathkit, Radio Shack, Olson and other old catalogs from what I think of as the “good old days” of electronics and my youth.
https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Electronics_Catalogs.htm

vintage_heath
1971: AR 2AX speakers, a KLH Model 51 receiver (yes, KLH made receivers and it was actually a good one), and a Garrard Zero 100 turntable.  The best part was that I wrote a music review column in graduate school, as a result of which I received hundreds of free LPs from every major record company from 1971 through 1974.  It's a wonder that I got any schoolwork done.  
After paying my last tuition bill as a senior in college, saving up a bit, started with:
Dual 1219 turntable
Shure V15MK2 cartridge
Wollensack reel-to-reel
Dynaco PAT-4 preamp
McIntosh MC225 power amp
Large Advent speakers

I may be reviving a zombie, but it is October...

In 1980 I was 16. My first "real" system consisted of:

Technics SA-404 Receiver (50wpc)

Dual 1264 Turntable with Ortophon cartridge

ADS L520 Loudspeakers

I added a Technics SL-P8 in 1983. I didn't upgrade that system for a long time. Although the CD player hasn't worked for some time, it more than held it's own against the constant stream of newer players. The ADS were traded in 1990. I will say this, they are still outstanding speakers and are a great recommendation to anyone that has a hankering for vintage gear.

In college I listened to OP systems (other people’s). I couldn’t afford a system.

Got a good job and started putting a system together. Before the internet I subscribed to a monthly high end used equipment sale paper. I couldn’t afford B&W 801s so I bought a pair of Mirage M3Si. IIRC, about $2k in the 80s. Guy was 400 miles, away, we met behind a gas station in a 40 mph wind in Bakersfield. we loaded to big items in my truck and I gave him a wad of Benjamins. Looked like a drug deal, I remember thinking at the time.

Well, I powered them with my humble Yamaha reciever while I saved for other gear. but I got distracted with other hobbies. Mountaineering, rock climbing, and triathlon all required expenive gear and travel. Then I got married and raised a family. So 35 years after I bought the M3Sis I started buying the rest of the system. Of course they had been overtaken by new speakers and they got sold too. But then I had plenty of money and the system came together pretty quickly, even with lots of gear getting upgraded/rejected promptly.

Jerry