An encounter and lesson in speaker prices ...


Not to long ago, in a shop I like but will remain nameless I got to observe a customer evaluate a pair of systems side by side. The buyer had an eastern European accent. First they listened to the larger system, $50k speakers, equivalently priced amps and digital.


It sounded _really_ good. Then we moved to another system. Slightly smaller speaker pair, around $20k, completely different DAC and amp. Sounded like crap. The digititis was unbearable and the speakers were clearly out of phase. On top of that, the treble and bass balance were now all wrong.


The buyer was "I like them, what colors do they com in? " and that was that.

After the buyer left I looked behind at the amp. Yep, I was right, the pahse was reversed. The darkness of the room and angle made this an easy and common mistake to make. But the rest was unbearable.


What is my point? The people buying the top end gear are not necessarily the one’s with decent ears, so we really cannot trust price points to be any sort of guide to value. If you develop your taste on your own, independent of prices, you can score some fabulously performing gear at a fraction of what this buyer was going to end up with.


Best,

E
erik_squires
In some households the music system is just another part of the decor,no matter if it sounds like crap:)A couple of times in waiting rooms I was flipping through magazines and saw turntables as accessories on shelves and new console stereo systems placed as to be aesthetically pleasing.Chosen by a decorator no doubt.
There's a Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab pressing of Dark Side of the Moon that literally "fixes" all the phase problems in the original.

Hahahaha.
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Fixes it!!?Ruins it!Those types of effects are still fun.I remember some friends and I passing a pair of headphones around "Woah!Sounds like it's shooting through my head!" Deep Purple,Led Zeppelin,etc.