Listening to equipment at home before you buy


This discussion is a recommendation for PS Audio.

I just retired, am new to the audiophile hobby and am enjoying it. (Hobby does have a steep "learning curve.")  I currently have a Jolida JD302CRC tube amp, teac UD-301 dac/preamp and Vandy 2CE sig speakers.  I like my current system but want to try a solid state power amp to compare the sound to the Jolida.

I have been watching the PS Audio videos and decided to do a home trial of the Stellar S300. I tested the amp at home for 30 days and preferred my current amp and returned the S300 to PS Audio. The return of the amp was as advertised, PS Audio paid shipping both ways with my full purchase price refunded.  I highly recommend PS Audio to anyone who wants to test their equipment at home.
128x1282tuby
2tuby I would trust your ears first followed by trying to work with a good audio dealer. Try to borrow the gear you are interested in take it home and listen playing music you know very well. I would start with the speakers first and work from there. If you have to strain to hear a difference in the $3K gear compared to the $10K don't bother spending more money.
Sadly a great many brick and mortar shops are incapable of demonstrating a musical experience. This past year I felt I might also like to update my system having also recently retired. One nice feature of the modern era is the ability to call up almost any material. I have the advantage of having recorded and mixed pop music and also listened to some of it for decades on multiple recording studio and home HiFi systems.

In demos on systems costing more than houses, I have endured zero depth, horrendous phase response, foot heft and point 180°, 'cabinet' on DI bass, vocalists a mile wide, no height, no stage, panned multitrack backing vocals as one wide smear, etc. More than once I wanted to say "you're ….ing joking"

OTOH, every internet twit is an expert in their own mind, never having attended an acoustic performance or heard a capable system.

The difference between $10k and $3k system is often inversely proportional to the price. Pricing today is stupid. A great many products are designed rather than engineered. If one is to believe the hype, recordings of yesteryear should be egregiously awful, which they clearly are not.

Unless you want to become a gear swapper, best recommendation is to visit as many B&M establishments as possible in a day's drive radius, find a knowledgeable salesperson and purchase a system that is musically satisfying on program you enjoy. And then just enjoy it.

@viridian 
I do not believe that an amp with a class D output stage is representative of the spectrum of solid state amps that are available. I would try again with a traditional power amp topology. This is not a put down of class D, just a suggestion to consider an alternative.
Class D is exactly representative of the amplifier spectrum. Some Class D amps are excellent.

It is important to mate the amp and the load. Never forget one is building a system and all parts must work harmoniously.

Just as in the early days of AB transistor amps, some early Class D amps left much to be desired.

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I have heard a few Class D amps and from what I heard, they are not quite ready for prime time.  For myself, I would never own one, especially since I despise bright (detail oriented) sound.