Dream Amps I Could Not Afford 20 Years Ago Now Undesirable


As a young audio enthusiast I used to lust for the high-end Audio Research LS25Mk2 and Reference Two preamps but couldn’t afford them during that time. Today at their used prices they are much more affordable now but I no longer find them appealing.

Does anyone here have such similar experiences? Stuff that you dream of owning 20 or 30 years ago do not appeal to you anymore and considered as junk (as an exaggeration).

Another one is Focal JM Labs Mezzo Utopia as the high price made it look unattainable 30 years ago. Now when I look at it in the For Sale ads mostly in poor condition with worn cabinet, the aspiration of owning a seemingly unattainable high-end gear from the past seems to be a thing of the past. The new Focal Utopia speakers are another story though..

ryder

I do understand that feeling. A couple of those dreams came true for me, the Nestorovic 5as speakers for one. On the other hand, I dreamed of a Krell KSA 250 for years until I finally realized that for the type of speakers that I preferred and the type of sound that I liked, the Krells weren’t really the right fit.

I lusted for McIntosh equipment for years. I was finally able to afford an integrated a few years back, but was never happy with it. They make great stuff, so I am not sure if it was a mis-match with the speakers, my expectations were too high, or perhaps my taste in sound changed. In any event, I sold the McIntosh and went with a Class A integrated which I love.

I've also lusted for the big corner Klipsch speakers. Never had the room for them. I would still like to try them out one day. 

It is funny you mention this. I remember hearing and seeing these old guys haul out this really expensive Audio Research gear from the dealer in Phoenix fourth years ago. I couldn’t even think about owning in my wildest dreams. The sound was absolutely heaven… but not remotely possible.

While I did get a used Audio Research preamp in 1980, that stayed in my system for over fifteen years, and then a few years later a PH2 phono stage. Which I upgraded several times. Most of the time, my system was Pass, and mostly other solid state components.

But, one by one, starting about fifteen years each component became Audio Research… and moved to Reference level. Now all my equipment is Audio Research Reference. I had no idea such a great system could be constructed. I think calibrating my ears to what real natural music sounded like by attending the symphony in the 7th row center for over ten years helped. The natural, musical sound so like the real thing. I really understand why Audio Research had such a following from its inception. They have mostly never deviated from the objective of reproducing real music with the natural perspective. Many other companies catered to real spectacular and unrealistic splashes of sound, ridiculous detail, and probe the depths of bass beyond realism… ARC has remained true to their founders vision.

So, for me… now I am the old guy, going into the store buying the stuff the young whipper snappers cannot afford. Well, actually my dealer comes to my house and drops off a demo of something he thinks I might like, and if I do, he orders one and comes by for the afternoon and installs it and we listen to it. So, while getting old is a pain in the butt, it has it’s perks… truly understanding what great equipment sounds like and being able to afford it.

Back then I lusted over everything in every store and in every magazine. And I still do.  I mean, who wouldn’t lust after a $50,000 Lampizator DAC or maybe some MBL 101 X-Treme speakers?