Walking Into A Brick & Mortar High End Audio Store


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I am currently pretty satisfied with my system the way it is right now. I am not in the market for any new purchases right now, mainly because I don't have the discretionary income to make big changes. However, sometimes I get the urge to want to go into a hifi store just to look. Eventually I will upgrade my speakers, cd player, preamp, a new dac for sure and may give class D amps a shot...but not right now.

Is it cool to go into a store just to look around, knowing you don't have the money or immediate need for an item?
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128x128mitch4t
Great article, Onhwy61. Thanks!

With respect to this excerpt in particular, though ...
In cases where a relative or interrogative human-class pronoun is associated with subject function in a subordinate clause that is not the main clause in which it is preposed, usage is divided ...
... I'm surprised that opinion would be divided :-)

Best regards,
-- Al
Yes, great article; thanks!

Adam18, the Mk6' are the most highly regarded, as you know; but Mk6's are not all created equal. During the lifespan of that model there have been certain years when the horns produced were (it is no longer made) really special. There is a lot of speculation and myth around the possible reasons why this is so; and it is. The cream of the crop of the Mk6's were the horns made from the late 50's to early 60's; those horns are the most sought after and most valuable. Generally speaking they do have some special qualities in the sound and response. I have had occasion to speak to a couple of the artisans who worked for Selmer during those years and there are two main reasons for their excellence: the manufacturing process was not as automated as it is today and the formulation of the metal used during those years was different; it was, technically, not brass but bronze with its higher copper content.
Adam18 - You've got it bad. The audiophile thing, that is. The bell sounds best live ........... and always will despite any pricey mods or upgrades to reproduction equipment.
Someone once said, "...for whosoever believeth in me shall have everlasting life." Maybe he should have said, "...for whomsoever believeth in me..."
Madam,
This is the sort of pedantic nonsense up with which I shall not put.

After Winston Churchill's secretary corrected a sentence in a letter she was typing because he had ended a it with a preposition, he returned it to her to be retyped. The above quote was attached.

Maybe we are leaning a bit too hard on this triviality. This is the internet, after all. Everything is misspelled with bad grammar. The English language I was taught in school will be completely bastardized or obliterated in just 2 more generations. And what has rap and texting done to spelling already?