Are bad rooms keeping the hobby alive?


Having just set up a dedicated room I have been thinking about rooms alot lately and although my room is not perfect, the upgrade bug is farther at bay then ever before so I wonder, do bad rooms keep this hobby alive and somewhat "well"?
There are so many who switch gear so often and when you look at there rooms if pictured many have what appear to be serious issues with the room and set up of speakers. So I assume these folks are more likley to chase a sound that they simply cant acheive as long as the room is holding them back........but this constant buying and selling is great for audio as a whole. So just curious of what others think, cheers.
chadnliz
Agree with you Chad. For me it was a lesson I had to learn through experience. The first step is a dedicated space where the wife (if you have one) doesn't care about the decor. Why don't they like those beautiful panels?
Absolutely correct! I've improved my system's sound greatly with proper speaker placement and room treatments, much greater improvement than many of the equipment changes I've made.
Chad, you delude yourself... it's just a matter of time, like all upgrade bugs.

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Chad,
I have always been a little less accepting that tweaking the room makesas big a differenceas people claim. I have heard acoustical architect designed rooms and the worst concievable type room with the exception of an empty corregated storage facility sound very good. That room is my audio wimp room. Get this the speakers are not in the Cardas triangle ratio, and impeded by a glass and maple coffee table and face a solid mirror wall (no joke) (it came with the house. Doesmy dedicated listening area set up with baffling soft furniture wall claerances seating position etc. do a better job. NO I have a 2'X 2' mirror on a small section of wall which relects sound but not consistenly a CD rack that does some musicianship itself. Beyond which if you call sound design "The" reason for the audiophile to stay interested I think that is ludicrous. Tweaks can make a difference but the desire to buy new or different equipment remains the reason for every classified, every auction, every other audio site, not dedicated to room treatments.
Yes it is an intense area of interest at the moment.
My theory is that while audio represents one of the larger niche hobbys. It is being kept alive by maybe one more generations that dislike IARs before it becomes as wildly popular as having carrier pidgeons. It is imploding at an alarming rate.