Is advice from a constant upgrader to be avoided


For a while now I've been reading these forums and to be honest i was thinking of leaving. I felt a bit out of depth given that it seems so many others have had so much experience through owning what seems to be tens of speakers, amplifiers, DACs etc etc and reading people buying and selling piece after piece after piece on the search for some sound.... 

When someone asks advice about a certain item it seems like half the audience have owned it and moved on and have a comment to make. I then read about someone buying an extremely expensive amp and deciding quickly to sell it because it doesn't sound right. Then someone else is on their fourth DAC in a year. 

So all these people have advice to give. What I'm wondering now is, is advice from a person who's never content, constantly changing their system, never living with a system for long enough, and have more money than patience, really the right person to take advice from? .

There seems fewer (maybe they're less vocal) people who buy gear and spend the time to appreciate it, and have maybe only had a very few systems in their lifetime. I think I'd rate their advice higher on the gear they know than the constant flipper/upgrader.

Is the constant flipper/upgrader always going to say that the gear they used to own was no good and they've now got better? Maybe their constant searching is because their ear is no good or they're addicted to the rush of opening a new box. 

Just because person X has owned a lot of equipment doesn't mean their advice is to be sought after, it could mean the exact opposite.

mid-fi-crisis

these last few posts are a good discussion, perhaps a bit unnecessarily snippy, but the debate and clarification and sharpening of points back and forth are useful and enlightening to those readers who are following, if they have the patience to do so

i would remind folks that building a good sounding system requires achieving synergy up and down the chain, so sometimes, perhaps changing a source (say a dac) brings improvement in added treble clarity in an already warm-sounding system, but maybe it is a touch too far in that direction, so there is some sibilance as a result, so then one moves back from, say a solid state line stage back to a tubed one to deal with that...

maybe another improvement integrates subs in an otherwise very nice sounding standmount speaker based system, but then the user now hears with the great deep bass brought by the subs also a touch of midbass bloat, so then he/she chooses to go from the existing tube amp to a solid state one, to grip the main speakers a touch better and lean out the midbass bloat

if one is fastidious in their approach, gaining some aspect of improvement in a system may indeed also incur a penalty in another secondary aspect of the sound, so a next, knock-on move, is needed to try to keep the gain and minimize the penalty of the initial move

so it isn’t as simple as i’m selling this piece because i didn’t like it... it is much more nuanced if you know what you are doing

and it may not be that i didn’t like these speakers, maybe i found a pair that i like more, overall... this is typical if one likes a line of speakers, say harbeths, and you save for a year, move from compact 7’s to super 5’s, then you find the super 5 super tweet brings a little more sizzle than you expected on streamed music, so you go back in the chain to ameliorate that...

Hey arch2,

ebm has a spreadsheet where he gets bonus points for any response to his posts.

He does keep it short, however....hint, hint mahgester.

I'm an upgrader, but as a newbie I start at cheap or not knowing what in looking for so I buy something. Then I learn about what others like and what I'd like to move up to so I make the move. I'm glad I took the advice of others as my Musical Surroundings Nova III was most definitely out classed by my Manley Chinook. I'm now looking to move up again to a higher end Allnic phono. Sometimes the upgrading is a learning process as well as an experience to see what and how things are relatable or different and what you get. That's where I'm at at least and I'm having fun and that's what matters.