Where is the significant point of diminishing returns on hi-end turntable?


For those that don’t know me I am newish to this game. Yes, I believe this chase for perfection in sound reproduction is a game. There are endless variables affecting the sound of every system and 100x that in opinions on each of these variables. I love cool $hit as much as the next guy but I am looking for an analog rig and I keep getting drawn into the seemingly endless "what about this option that costs tons more?". I started with a $6 to $10K budget and now I am considering a $25K setup (Table, cart and phono stage) after talking to a local retailer. I will be blunt, I want to be that guy in the Memorex ad from the 80’s that is getting blown away by his system (my impression is he is overwhelmed by the amazing sound coming from that speaker not the volume). Now that I have acquired some pretty descent stuff I am spending 15 plus hours each week listening and really enjoying this hobby. I don’t want to have any regrets and just be marginally satisfied with my setup but where do I draw the line? Back to my initial question; what is a reasonable amount to spend on an analog setup to achieve the best bang for the buck? I may be somewhat unique in that I don’t want to constantly be upgrading my equipment, I just want to buy great products the first time that are very satisfying and spend hours listening to great music. I don’t want to be the guy always chasing the next great thing.
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Keep up what your doing , I'm watching from the sidelines. This is above my level ,but very interesting. I find the comments busting on your budget ridiculous. It's your money buddy and the range your in seems fitting to me .. people spend 20k on a rug . I can't doesnt mean they shouldn't. Enjoy the adventure . Although I suspect you will continue your quest for audio nirvana at any level .. 
You're in good hands with Thom.  You're better off taking his advice than trying to derive any useful information from the 80-odd disparate responses on this thread.

Wrong. Our collective has more knowledge than one man. Besides, we don't want to sell any turntable to him, except for that Walker offer.
As for the dealers unwilling to let you hear the tables in your home, well, in their view you are not very likely to buy from them and I understand that you didn't offer them 'consulting fees' for this kind of audition. Pay them and you'll almost certainly get it. I don't know about Colorado but in New York City area if you pay enough someone will come to clean your record before you want to play it at just about any time of the day. But that 'enough pay' should be good enough. It's modern America, money rules, big money.
@inna I did offer to pay for the in-home trial. They said there is too much risk is loaning out expensive turntables. Amps and other gear is a different story. "Too much can go wrong with a turntable on loan". Apex is less than 15 minutes from my house, so not like they even have to travel any distance. Oh well, probably their loss but I guess they have a lot of business os someone else will just buy it off the advice provided over the phone.
I see. It's a damn problem and internet shopping does more harm than good.