How many of us are truly diversified


So here is my question after reading a couple of these Class D threads and how they are taking over the world.
How many of us are truly diversified in our home audio systems. How many of us have multiple systems in the home that are of different class amps or integrated.

I have Class D Yamaha and NAD 3020 out by my pool.We have a Pass Labs INT25 (A) in the bedroom.
Quicksilver Integrated AB tube in the officeAH Quliton X200 class A/AB in the living roomAnd I have a Bel Canto.One C5i in the hangar.
I am going to say I love my tube amps and the thing I like about the Class D stuff I have is I can go Cheap, Cheap on speakers. Hell they are on the deck by my pool and in our hanger (cheap old metal style hanger, rusty and almost a dirt floor).
So I was curious how many of us here have multiple systems of various classes and what is your fave.


128x128earlflynn
Diversified?  Now we have to be diversified?  Phooey on that.

If you are buying buying amps with the goal of simply owning the many different classes, then you've lost track of the plot.  Same deal if you are buying to belong to the class D club.  Class D is not taking over the world, and neither is class A, class A/B, class H or class Z.  

Buy what you like to listen to, whatever makes your speakers really sing.  It just so happens that I've got a class D amp in my car.  Sounds harsh until it warms up in the winter, all other times it sounds flawless.
Lol @213runnin was only asking a question.

enjoy your class Z now that’s a new one….

The alpine in my hellcat sounds awesome. 
i don’t ’diversify’ by technology... technology is only a means to an end, what the technology deployed in a piece of audio gear is only of interest on an intellectual level ... it is the result that matters and what i really care about -- how good is the music produced...

i also think ’diversify’ is the wrong word, as it implies an objective of managing risk or downside of some sort - not what we are doing in this pursuit

the proper notion the op may be trying to get at is to simply ’have variety’ -- that i do, like having tube and solid state amplification... once again, only in service to the resulting musical experience it produces

Variety is the spice of life. I like the word variety but I have no problem with "diversify." There have been times in my life when I have hewed to too narrow a path in all kinds of ways -- eating the same kinds of foods, watching the same kinds of shows, doing the same kind of exercise. "You should diversify," I’ve been advised by friends with different habits when they heard me express boredom. What they were recommending was "variety," but what I needed to do was "diversify." To stick with what I had out of mere stubbornness is called "narrow-mindedness."

OP, it sounds like you have wound up with a variety of kinds of gear, likely producing different sonics. My guess is that you now have a broader understanding of different ways that music can sound -- and the virtues of those different outcomes -- than me and probably many others.

If you were narrow before, now you can call yourself "diversified" because you made an effort to broaden your mindset and experiments.

If you wound up with different gear by chance, you’re not diversified; you just wound up, blessedly, as "experienced."