Audiophile Priorities and Recent Topics


I'm increasingly fascinated by the number of threads that have been created lately by OP's who have joined over only the last 2 months with less than 30 posts that all seem related to the importance of wires and tweaks. While I'm not dismissing the notion that everything matters in hifi (including digital cable), it seems that these topics vastly overwhelm thread topics that clearly would have more influence to hifi audio sound such as discussions of the sonic characteristics of various amplifier topologies, the importance of simplifying the signal path, and identifying fantastic speaker/amplifier synergies, etc...

If some unsuspecting newbie were to stumble onto this forum they would likely come away thinking that a fuse or a piece of wire are the most important elements towards obtaining wonderful hifi sound. This is unfortunate. For example, my discovery of listening to a SET circuit years ago paired with speakers possessing a high and flat impedance greatly outshines any joy derived from identifying the finest digital cable produced by man. I'm simply questioning the hifi priorities that this forum seems to be obsessed with lately.

Is it just me?
128x128three_easy_payments
Cleeds:

I have been “actively been working at this” for 53 years. There are moments during that time where I have been happy with the sound. But “Happy” is a moving goal post.

I would say that within the last month that, thanks to the new room of 3 years and finally hitting the correct sub and main speaker placement last month, that my system made a giant leap and finally sounds the way it should.

People operate with constraints: budget, location, room, time. My constraint would be considered by others to be a blessing: a 2,000 sq ft loft for $1,000 a month in the middle of NoHo in lower Manhattan. It was a 41 year trade off: huge luxurious space in the heart of the greatest city in the world in exchange for a room with lots of sound reflections.
One could more precisely estimate bottom line value of fine tuning devices by removing every single one and compare. I'm not gonna do it. I've often done this when adding individual fine tuning device. Sometimes the addition of device is such that I couldn't go back to prior state. In that case, the device is invaluable. Add all the fine tuning devices together, becomes even more invaluable. I know I won't be removing my fine tuning devices.
MC:

”I really don’t mean to sound disrespectful but your mind is easily boggled”

🙄

That emoji is my final engagement with you.

Curtains! 
unreceivedogma
Cleeds: I have been “actively been working at this” for 53 years. There are moments during that time where I have been happy with the sound.
Oh, good to know. I was only responding to what you previously wrote:
... for the first time in the 40 odd years I’ve been working with stereo I’m happy with the sound ...
@cleeds 

It really has been 4 decades.  YIKES!  When I started I was chasing, learning and attempting to find the correct attributes with no real success.  That was due to many factors space, knowledge and finances.  I got to a point that music was no longer an enjoyable experience and all I heard was equipment.  I boxed up the components that I thought were correct and put them in storage for two decades.
From that point on I stopped chasing hi end and eventually just  sufficed with an AV receiver and some JBL bookshelves on concrete blocks until about a half a decade ago. 
For the last 6 years now I have been learning and listening again.   It kept sounding better but I never thought it was not much more than really good mid-fi.

Thanks to forums like this, stereo stores, craigslist and digital streaming I was  able finally to get a system that to my ears checked all the boxes.  I have enough new music to keep me interested in music and a sound system that plays it back with enough enjoyment that I rarely cringe anymore.

Everything is different now than it was 40 years ago.  My music tastes,  my hearing and my ability to research and afford the stuff I'm interested in.

It really isn't that mind boggling.  I have still have friends from 40 years ago who have gone through a similar experiences of chasing the unobtainable and coming back to it with a different approach to get to their final destination. 

I'm still going tweak stuff that's the hobby but I feel finally after over four decades feel the foundation is there.