@ billzame - hi there, I don’t mean to be contentious regarding your recent point, but I have something that might give you some room for thought - being new to the whole high end audio hifi hobby, I’ve poured over so many articles, reviews and everything audiogon has to offer, and I’ve discovered something interesting - I’ve never seen reviews as necessarily written for the sole purpose of one’s selling, or my search for, a particular product - I read everything I come across to learn more about details,; about concepts; about audible and inaudible differences; about power cords; about what certain reviewers specific preferences are for certain products I may not have listened to, in comparison to those that I have; and just about everything related to our hifi world, in order to understand the complex relationships between technology and the human ear. I may be mistaken, but I believe most audiophiles read for the sake of deeper knowledge too, and that the specific purpose of buying is not necessarily the most important. Imagine what might have been missed in the review if one merely focussed on the specifications of cost and power output that were already at the start of the review! And, even if specifications were all that were desired, I have been powering my 88db sensitive speakers with a 15wpc SET amp for the past six months to the most amazing sound - numbers that a hifi component exhibits as an isolated object doesn’t really tell any truly accurate story, because it will never be isolated in use, in being a part of a very specific set of complex relationships within any given system. I have found that the focus on specification numbers as an object of research is an unhealthy habit, as it might make me miss everything else more important about the profound and critical relationships that musical reproduction and listening is truly about.
In friendship : ) - kevin
In friendship : ) - kevin