What is the actual percentage of people exclusively listening to vinyl vs digital?


I well remember in the ‘80s when we were amazed and thrilled by CD.
Wow, no more pops and clicks and all the physical benefits.
Seems so many abandoned vinyl.
But now, with so much convenience, available content and high SQ seems even dedicated vinylholics have again abandoned vinyl and embraced digital. However, there is clearly a new resurgence in analog.
But I look at, for example, whitecamaro’s “List of amplifiers...” thread and no one seems interested in analog!
To me, it seems strange when auditioning “$100Kish gear, that vinyl doesn’t enter the picture or conversation.
mglik
You misread my post, "if I won't POTENTIALLY listen to three times annually, out it goes". for the purpose of determining to keep or discard the record.   I just got 3,500 LPs in the last two years and moved to a new home.  I intend to cull the extra opera and vocal LPs and redistribute them.   I always have new records to hear.  I've heard about 80% of my CDs (virtually all the single CDs, working my way through the big box  classical music sets).

I listen to about 12 to 15 LPs weekly, possibly more and 12 to 15 CDs, in part or entirety.  That's 1,248 to 1,560 CDs and LPs per year.  Your math is off by millions of minutes. I do listen for at least 20 hours weekly.   My work permits me to listen late at night and get up at 9am. 

I also, pre-pandemic, was a local recording (engineer) for a chamber group (Viklarbo), several choirs (that I sing in) and occasionally for a professional orchestra.  I've recorded concerts at Disney Hall, Ford Theater, Royce Hall, etc. irregularly over 30 years.  It's not my job but for the love of music.  

My prior home had me mix wall storage in a listening room 25' X 20' X 11'6 + equipment area, custom built but not to as high a standard.   It wasn't a small home (3,700') but overstuffed.  
@fleschler those people will never understand what is record collecting and real passion for records.

I wish I could buy as much as you, it's fun to have records and there are always hidden gems (not even available in digital or even in the database). I'm buying records every month. 
@fleschler 
Sorry for the mistake - I multiplied by seconds instead of minutes and didn't see the word POTENTIALLY, but you are making my point even more clearly. If you listen to 15 LPs a week, that's 780 per year or about 5% of your inventory, even less if you hit your goal of 3 listens per year. At that rate, you would listen to your accessible ones that you intend to play once every 20 YEARS! (I don't look at anything other than LPs since they take up way more space). 

@chakster - I have a real passion for listening to music that I am passionate about, live or on records, not collecting records. In fact, I really don't see the point of collecting anything you don't use/enjoy unless it is gives you pleasure to look at it, like art or maybe baseball cards, stamps, coins, etc.unless you are using it as an investment vehicle. I doubt fleschler gets pleasure out of looking at 28,000 album covers, but maybe I'm wrong. It annoys me that I may never listen to maybe 20-25 of my 300 records. No sure what I was thinking when I bought them a long time ago. Maybe they were part of the Columbia Record Club I was a member of for their initial shipment. I don' think I've bought a record in that group in 40 years. When I was a kid, I collected baseball cards because I was and am a big sports fan, and was always told they'd be worth something some day. That is only true if they are in mint, almost untouched condition. That's tough for a kid who traded and flipped them. I have a few years of the entire series' in the early 70s and in total they're worth about $15!

I've heard of Maria Condo, never read or saw her, but she is into simplicity and organization and I agree with what I hear she preaches: if something doesn't give you joy or you don't wear it or use it, etc, get RID OF IT! I get anxious anytime I look in a "junk" drawer or closet and feel the need to  throw out 90% of it. My wife doesn't want me to ever look in one. She won't throw out an empty pill bottle. Opposites attract I guess.

I hate wasting anything - time, space, money, etc., and I think of collecting anything never touched as organized hoarding. Worse is if it is not organized - it's just hoarding. Anything not fit for the house or "overstuffed", put in the garage if you have room. If you haven't touched it in a year or two, throw it out or sell it or give it away, or put it in the shed or crawlspace or attic and start the clock over.
I listen in a period of few years thousand of times the same cd with variation for sure with other cd...

Am I nut?

Some music like the art of the fugue or orchestral suites of Bach cannot be listen a few times...

Some other music ressemble any other and i dont want to listen to it more than few minutes....

There is always the deep moving music, few hundred of which we return each day, week, months, or year....

The other are only a temporary curiosity without great thrill save the change...


I listened for example Heinrich Schutz "Geistliche Chormusic by Mauersberger each day for few years one hour.....I dont fathom till this day this absolute choral masterpiece like very few at the same level even Bach work hard to create....A pure synthesis of German heavy grammar with baroque italian harmony fusionned perfectly.... It is so great works that even Schutz never repeat this.... Like, nevermind his marvellous 500 other concertos, there is only one "four seasons" in all Vivaldi...