Forced to DIY


Sometimes we don't want to DIY things, but we are forced to.

After living in this house for 2 years I was finally ready to get a plumber to deal with the leaky kitchen faucet.  Turns out all the plumbers in the area are backed up from January's cold snap which broke many pipes and put them behind.  I literally can't get a plumber.

I may not be rich enough to buy D'Agostino or Boulder but I sure as hell can hire a plumber.  If I could find one.  So instead of hiring a plumber, and swiping my credit card I have to do it all myself.  New strap wrench, 2 valve kits from Moen even if the faucet literally says Kohler on it, and an hour later I have a faucet that doesn't leak.

Right now my integrated is causing me some issues.  I am honestly tired and I'd rather pay to fix it, but the effort to find a qualified tech and package and ship the amp is so much more work than I would need to fix it myself that yet again, I'm DIYing it.

Mind you in a lot of ways I like doing DIY projects, but the plumbing and this particulare issue are not really that. 

How about you?  Have you found yourself driven to DIY at home or in your stereo because the alternative was just not feasible?

erik_squires

Some years back now, I simply grew tired (to the point I'd had enough) of waiting in vain for manufacturers to somehow 'divine', or to pluck out of the ether, exactly what kind of build quality, sound quality, feature sets, etc., etc. that I wanted, at any given price point. It wouldn't have taken them a lot of money for them to do it, either, nor was it tech-intensive. Early on I tried contacting them many times to try to fill them in on what I, and perhaps others, might be looking for, but to no avail.

The budget stuff didn't measure up for me, sound-wise. And after the intermediate levels of gear, the high end to me just seemed to be, more or less, an exercise in gold-plating everything...while the sound quality seemed to start to slip in their rank of priorities. It was hard for me to find any examples of gear that had what I could call 'definitive' (meaning very well-rounded) performance for its class. IOW they would get a variety of things right, but then fall down on at least one area of sound or other. This is something I've found that does not really seem to change, even the higher in price bracket we go...it's still the same story. Bad execution?? At the higher levels it doesn't look like that to me - just plain bad design. It's as if no one can be bothered to actually sit down think through a design comprehensively any more...at any price level. I'm sure they could if they wanted to, they just evidently don't want to. I literally think they see themselves as too busy making money.

So, I had to build my own speakers, for one. I'm not enough of a DIY'er to do circuit design, but if I had that skill, I'd probably use it. 

In the end, I settled on medium priced gear that was as close to the ideal performance-to-price ratio as I could find and that was also still cheap enough that it wouldn't scare me too bad if I got under the hood and changed things around some. That and some power conditioning success and I was able to build the 'dream system' that now gives me bliss. It's just that I couldn't have done it nearly as well for the money - or even as well at all -  without resorting to DIY now and again.

But the more dissatisfied I was with the market offerings, the more voiceless I found myself among the manufacturers. Everybody these days seems only concerned with either the high end or the "average audiophile". Experienced audiophiles who are looking for something of inherent value tend to be shut out, I think.

But, maybe that's just me, I've always thought of myself as a frustrated designer anyway.

As most of you know, my partner and I have been repairing, upgrading, modifying, rebuilding and manufacturing audio components for twenty plus years.  He has a masters in electronic engineering.  He is the guy who people turn to when their tach cannot fix something.  So while I believe a few people here are good parts swappers, probably most cannot fix a hum, or noise, or change a design to make it sound better.  We offer our services to everyone who needs them.  Plus we enjoy meeting new people and assisting them the best we can.  We have our dedicated Listening Room in Northern New Jersey so people can come by and learn, and enjoy listening to various components we have in our room.

Happy DIYing!

@bigkidz 

Very interesting to see your post above. At some point down the road, I just may look you guys up!