Own many mid-game speakers or a few end-game speakers.
But, these things quickly add up and could become endless pursuit, especially consider speakers differ not just in response curves but also in dynamic, decay, sound stage and details that are all hard to emulate with software. I’m trying to limit the max spending I have on speakers. I’m wondering what’s the perspective of upgrading v.s. buying into more diversity in this game. A few questions I have for you is, say you have $60k in budget on speakers new/used and you have infinite rooms (no amp/source), how would you allocate it (from buying 5000 Homepod Minis to one B&W nautilus) and why?
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- 33 posts total
I’m not anywhere as far along the journey as most of you, but I can’t fathom an end-game-be-all-I’ve-already-tried-everything approach to this hobby. As I build up and out and better my system I’m already planning for variety to come. I’ll want at least two wildly different types of reference speakers to switch between and enough different amp choices that I’ll know I can properly drive any other speakers I bring in to try out. I hope I’m never ready to give up on finding something new. |
Hi,
I have had over 450 sets of speakers through my listening room. I once had a gentleman that lived not too far from me trade-in over 50 sets of small speakers that he had accumulated from going to many audio shows and purchasing a set of speakers at the end of each show. Great person but at the end of the day he decided he just wanted to have one great set of speakers and trade-in all his sets of speakers that he had purchased over the years for 1 set of high efficient horn speakers. For myself I think speakers are personal preference and need to be carefully matched to your favorite amplifier based on the following criteria. Size of your room, type of music you prefer and volume you play your music at in your home. There are many other factors to take into account but I have seen many people purchase a very large set of speakers that will never work in their smaller rooms and this can be a very big mistake. I also prefer high efficient speakers with quality tube gear. The fun thing with high efficient speakers is that just changing a tube or even a power cord can be immediately heard. One of my favorite speakers is made by a company called
hORNS. These speakers are built in Poland and they are called Symphonies. Here is a recent review; http://v2.stereotimes.com/post/horns-symphony-loudspeakers-by-mike-wright/ This is a wonderful sounding, highly efficient, super will built speaker that we have been importing from Poland for 3 years. Cheers,
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All tweeked out "Burmester 961"s floor standers. Every time my front-end improves, e.g. amp bias readjustment, cable differences, x-over Mundorf bypass caps, pair selected new carbon AUDAX 5½" midrange drivers..., they do play along and show the difference / improvement - and this since their 1996 purchase! It still always amazes me how they can do this!?! To this end I'm now too scared to even consider any replacements. M. 🇿🇦 |
This is a tough call. I have two pairs of speakers I am perpetually swapping between. I just had a blogger over to discuss systems and he is in sort of the same place. He is looking at upgrading to MBLs which are such cool speakers but would miss "cone and dome" sound on occasion. His view was one big time speaker (like MBLs) and some less expensive speakers that deliver different sound. It's an approach. One comment he made was that with two large speakers (MBL and say Magico) he would never swap because they are just too heavy. |
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