I generally purchase used equipment. The secondary market allows most components to settle around their intrinsic value. A Dynaco ST-70 will never sell for the price of a McIntosh MC225, regardless of what a seller may think. Conditions are not the same in the new item retail market. Transparency is deliberately avoided because an opaque market benefits sellers more than buyers. I recall the TAG McLaren group purchased an audio company with an established line of components. The new owner commissioned new casework with thick metal faces, substantial metalwork, and shiny connectors. Looked great, and expensive. MSRP was 2x the price of the old units made by the company before it was purchased. Most reviews were favorable, and some were fawning. Then a reviewer opened up the brand new case and discovered the old component was literally bolted in place, with additional electrical connections to the new casework. TAG was forced to suspend sales of the model, and later sold off the audio company to another buyer, at a substantial loss. There was another company that tried to pull roughly the same stunt with a CD player and DAC, until they were exposed. And companies wonder why buyers are reluctant to pay MSRP ?