I think there are two of kinds sound equipment enthusiasts, automobile buyers and hobbyists. To automobile buyers sound equipment is an appliance. You buy the best your income allows and drive it until your income improves or you get tired of looking at it, and then you drive the next set of gear. The hobbyist is on an endless quest for a new aural experience. It is like a heroin habit, if your habit was limited to your income and you could sell your old heroin. Because the absolute sound is unreachable, the pursuit is infinite.
I myself have always been an automobile buyer, and due to various career hiccups I was driving an old banger for the longest time. You are probably familiar with this kind of setup: Quality brands but the cheapest thing they make. Musical Fidelity amplifier but the old shoebox-sized one they used to make; Sota turntable but a Moonbeam bought used, that sort of thing. Lately through improved circumstances I have moved up to what I like to think is a gentleman’s mid-fi, which I suspect I will be driving for the rest of my life. If I spent half as much as I do on records I’d have something much better in the electronics line, I think, but such are my priorities.