@ellajeanelle would you happen to know anything about their subs? namely
Acoustic Research S112PS |
Your greatest high end audio purchase!!!
My audiophile journey has extended to over 40 of adventurous sonic delight. Over the coarse of my over 40 year journey as an audiophile, like so my others, I cycled through a multitude of speakers, amps, cables, etc,. Now that I’m an old guy, I’ve pretty much settled on my "End-Game" audio system for the long haul, primarily because I simply love the way it sounds, and also because, at this juncture, I no longer have the will, nor do I have the desire to continue the crazy (but fun) merry-go-round of audio components in and out like I did in years past (my spouse and my wallet thank me). When I look back on all the high-speed audio gear that I’ve owned down through the years, and after giving it much insightful thought, I’ve come to the conclusion that, after everything was said and done, my beloved Revel Salon 2 speakers were my overall most pleasurable and greatest purchase of all. What was yours?
@ellajeanelle would you happen to know anything about their subs? namely
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I hate to repeat from a recent post… but.
In 1978 I committed to a really great system and after reading popular stereo magazines (Stereo Review ((not a good source)) I bought the top rated Onkyo tape deck. It performed well, I thought. To get the very best out of it I had a technician align the heads for maximum performance. That destroyed the sound.. several iterations… never sounded good again.
I was in a high end store sharing my woes with a sales person and he said, “here, take this home and try it.” It was a first generation Nakamichi, wood around the outside, upright.. seven years old, weighed a ton. I was skeptical. I took it home, it was unbelievable. Comparing it to the original, in perfect working order Onkyo, the Onkyo sounded like a small plastic transistor radio vs real high fi equipment. It was a revelation, showed me what set apart audiophile (other than astronomical cost) from the rest and set me on my audiophile path for the next fifty years. | |
Can’t single out any one but here are the biggest winners for me, all current: 1) Ohm Walsh Speakers 2) KEF meta speakers 3) Roon 4) Cambridge Audio Evo 150 5) Room Equalization Wizard (REW) freeware (used with Roon DSP) 6) dbpoweramp for ripping CDs and Picard freeware to help with autotagging 7) Linn Axis turntable with Denon dl103R cartridge. 8) Audacity freeware to master analog vinyl converted to digital. This enables me to do my own digital mastering when converting vinyl to digital to then add to my digital music library and access via Roon. 9) Humminguru Ultrasonic record cleaner to get records spiffy clean before playing and typically also converting to digital.
Search my posts over the years and you should find I’ve elaborated on each of these at some point. | |
I have two and I can't decide which was/is more influential. The first, which I no longer have but it lasted for over 30 years, was an Audio Research SP 10II back in the days when vinyl ruled. The second is my Silverline Bolero speakers acquired over 10 years ago. They have everything I need in a speaker, tone (especially), clarity, and looks as well. They have been in production now for at least 12 years and you rarely see them for sale so I think others must agree with me. :-) Getting a bit spendy though. | |
Like you and many others, I began this quest in the early 80s with a receiver and decent speakers. Many amplifiers and speakers later, the hobby eventually led me to working with Merlin International speakers, and then a speaker business of my own. After 4 or 5 years in business, and numerous speaker designs and builds later that were mostly value oriented, I made something more along the lines of a "best effort" speaker using Focal kevlar woofer and midbass drivers in a transmission line, and Seas tweeters with top shelf crossover components (including Convergent capacitors). I tweaked that design until I loved it ~ 1995. I thought they were really good then, but had no idea that I’d feel even more strongly about them 30+ years later. They’ve improved with every system upgrade and tweak I’ve made. After bi-amping the system with SS on the woofers, and tube monoblocks up top, all I want to do is listen now. 😎 Hopefully these links will work:
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Here's a link to the Acoustic Research AR9: Revisiting the Acoustic Research AR9 4-Way Legendary Loudspeaker | Audioholics
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My journey began in the early 80’s and I have been in this hobby about the same time as you, a little over 40 years. I am also at a point where I just don’t want or need anything else. I ended up accumulating more components than I can keep track of. They are either set up in one of six rooms or in a closet somewhere. From time to time, I’ll give something away to a nephew, who’s beginning to enjoy this hobby at the age of 14. Too bad I find his choice of music genres awful. Hopefully he’ll grow out of that. If I had to choose one component it would be a pair of Acoustic Research AR9 speakers that I bought very early on, also in the 80’s. I have gone through and have many speakers, but those continue to be my favorite. I continue to enjoy music very often, but the stereo buying bug has for the most part gone away. I did buy a DAC not too long ago and then ended up buying 3 more for other rooms once I realized how convenient streaming was. Guilty as charged, but I had to "modernize"! 😎 | |
I think actually it was a small headphone amp. Bought from Hongkong back in 2009. Because it changed my mind, regarding hifi. I had invested in 'heavy' stuff, huge s-state amps, hard to drive speakers. Then I heard a Graaf OTL amp at a friend's place and was intrigued. And bought the headphone amp, also OTL, without having heard it. It sounded better than my main rig! So I sold the huge s-state and the power-hungry speakers, and bought OTL amps with matching sensitive speakers for my main rig. Have not looked back. |