Top 10 Snafus to avoid when building a good rig


OK, I'm sure we'll come up with more than 10. Whatever.

Maybe I'll compile the top 10 once we get a few.

I'll start with my #1: avoid putting speakers that are too big in a room that is too small
128x128mapman
Very very good posts. I enjoyed reading them all. As typical with most things, there are different levels involved and most people start at a lower to medium level based on knowledge, experience or money available.

So, to me it depends on whom is asking about stereo equipment and what they should get. Where are they in their life regarding music? So, using my experience, both good and bad, I use the experience in talking with others. Elizabeth's post was insightful and funny, but true. many other's were well written and true also. But in agreement with Elizabeth and others, here are some of mine.

1. Not knowing your price point. (which is hard to know unless and until you know what is out there)
2. Not being aware of how you would listen to music. Do you listen to music as background music, serious sit down for hours listening or a combination of both?
3. Buying a system before knowing if your Home theater will be combined with listening room? This is really important.
4. Buying before listening to it in your system and in your home. This really must be avoided.
5. Letting someone or some dealer talk you into buying something, you really didn't need and not performing item 4 above.
6. Unless it was sold at a price you simply couldn't walk away from, not walking away first and thinking. This is also really important. I never let anyone rush me into buying by threatening that it won't be there when I return or that the price will be different. I have to walk away for a time to think first. Always. If I'm rushed, I simply will not buy.
Thinking that if something is good, then more of it is better. For example... brass weights, thickness of cables, size of the speakers, watts/channel, maple, isolation devices... in fact the only thing that doesn't fit this is money :-)
Minorl, Your points 5 and 6 are really important. People often get lost in complexity of the audio and end up at the mercy of dealers who have different objectives. I second your recommendation to take time and not rush with decisions.
Yes, I'd say not focusing on the "high end" aspect rather than or prior to the "audio" is a very sound piece of advice.
Putting room demisions and acoustic treatments as first priority. Then getting you ac wired compentently and appropriately to your systems needs. Thse are the building blocks of a bad, good, or great system. Just do it, you will not regret it. After that if you get a bad system to startoff it'll sound better than it ever would have if those changes weren't made.