A moment when you realized better sound was possible.


In 2001 i bought a car with an upgraded JBL sound system. As the years went by I got used to that sound, and one day I was listening to a CD in the car, and when I got home brought the CD in to continue listening. The sound on my home system was flat, dull and dead sounding in comparison. That realization started my on a quest for better sound, and years and dozens of speaker/amp combinations later, my home system sounds much, much better.
dtapo
Back in the 80s as a freshman in college I heard my first CD player. The technology seemed pretty cool but I was afraid to be on the only one in the crowd saying "vinyl sounds better". So I suppose it was a moment when I realized worse sound was possible yet promoted as better sound - actually only "more convenient" sound.
Yep Continued fighting a rear guard action against cd for quite a while until the availability of re issues overwhelmed me.My move to cd was tempered by the lack of available vinyl catalogue until the recent renaissance.My first realization of good sound happened when a walked into the local hi-fi shop and was demonstrated the possibilities of better equipment.This continued to happen nearly every time I ventured back until the shop closed.Nothing like having a salesman who really knows his stuff.
I went to a friends house back around 1988. He had just made two 18" floor firing subwoofers with passive crossovers and plenty of watts and current (I don't know the specs) to account for the impedance of his 9 Kappas. The difference in how those speakers sounded to mine, (I just had a pair of EPI towers) then with the difference of the subs was surreal to me. I noticed how much space between the notes was there and how if he turned it up, there was no pain to my ears. 

This started me on my "journey".
Back in the late 80s I was able to pick up a Luxman turntable with a decent MM cartridge. Several years later I was helping in the construction phase of a recording studio, where payment at one phase in the overall effort was in the form of used vintage audio gear. Not knowing anything of the company or quality of equipment they produce, I chose a McIntosh C20 tube preamp for that paycheck. A few years later (late 90s) I was able to pick up a pair of Proac Studio 1s (again, not knowing anything about their reputation). 

At some point thereafter I put them all together with record play of John Lennon's 'Watching the Wheels' and, for the first time in my life, experienced a sound stage (i.e. sound imaging). I've been chasing the dream ever since that amazing experience...

Current state = that same Luxman TT, a Luxman CL-38uSE preamp, Atma-Sphere M60 OTL amps, and those same Proac Studio 1s.
Freshman year of college I heard some DIY speakers some upperclassmen in my dorm had made. Eventually I got to visit a music lab where they had made a pair of subs with 24” drivers. The cabinets were multiple layers of of plywood with sand between the inner and outer box. I think the main dimensions were 8’hx4’wx12’d, but I’m not 100% sure on the depth. I do know they had left the outside as full sheets to simplify the cuts and there was a long heat sink extending from each driver’s voice coil. No idea what the upper range speakers or amplification were, but I’m sure it was massive. I remember one specific test track vividly. It was an outside setting with birdsong, the wind rustling long grass, and a small stream that had lifelike realism. Then way off in the distance was a barely audible whine that slowly grew in volume until it became recognizable as a plane. The plane gets closer and the volume grows until you could literally feel the jetliner flying over your head as it came in for a landing somewhere beyond the speakers. It was surreal.