Interesting Result of Comparison of Expensive and Budget Setups


My DAC has both RCA and XLR outputs. My 1 year old tube preamp has both RCA and XLR inputs. My 10+ years old budget 5.1 channel receiver has only RCA inputs. In a sudden, I had an idea to want to make two setups to compare the sound. 

Setup A (tube):

Tube amps (50 watts per channel) and preamp, a pair of top of the line 2-1/2 way tower horn speakers of this speaker series with the name brand audiophile series of XLR interconnect, power and speaker cables, total MSPR cost was way way over $10K in retail stores. All components are fairly new.

Setup B (solid state):

AV receiver (95 watts per channel) and a pair of midrange smaller 4-way tower cone speakers with stock or self-made RCA interconnect, power and speaker cables, total MSPR cost was $1K top.  All components are 10+ years old.

Source, volume, room treatment, and listening position were the same for both setups. I used mute function to turn on and off the sound simultaneously on both setups to try to hear the differences immediately. Here were the results:

1. Setup A was sounding slightly warmer. Bass was slightly less punchy as well.

2. Setup B was sounding noticeably brighter and a bit more dynamic. Bass was also a bit punchier.

3. Sound stage, vocal clarity and musical presence were about the same.

My thoughts:

1. Since there was no huge difference in sound quality between two setups, I recommend not to let the price tags drive your choice when you shop for your gears. 

2. High quality playback source is the key to have great music, not necessary the amps, the preamps or the cables.

I would like to hear your opinions. Welcome to share.

 

idolindian

I recently did a quick A/B between my original setup (essentially) and my current setup.

Original - Integra 50.1 Receiver (direct mode) to Focal 836v speakers

Current - Maverick Audio TubeMagic D2 DAC (with mods) to Pathos Classic One MkIII (with 1960s Mullard) to Focal 836v speakers.

The A/B comparison didn't yield nearly the gap in sound that is apparent with any significant listening time.

I think it shows two things:

(1) You don't have to spend a ton of money to have an enjoyable sound.

(2) If you love your speakers you'll enjoy the music.

Since there was no huge difference in sound quality between two setups, I recommend not to let the price tags drive your choice when you shop for your gears. 

cars, food, vacations, clothing and so on... if you don't know how to spend the money wisely you are likely to waste it

that is why this forum exists for hifi gear to reproduce music, knowledge and experience matters (good hearing too)

“…Since there was no huge difference in sound quality between two setups, I recommend not to let the price tags drive your choice when you shop for your gears.,,,”

Ignoring the obvious exclusion for $$ spent stupidly by the arrogantly vane and still uniformed …


“ no huge difference “ is an undefined, widely variable, and highly biased personal value judgement . Another listener would ( and likely will …) have a polar opposite assessment of your bespoke take on it,

Audio forum parties accept the prevailing basic tenet of “You get what you pay for “ as they move into higher $$$$ strata equipment

Intuitively, It’s never been a $$$ automatically drives audio satisfaction, but as we upgrade, we do pay $$$ for that ethereal greater audio satisfaction from a better sound performance quality. Otherwise, why upgrade?

I have 4 systems … $1500 - $50,000. All are satisfying, but they do not compare as equivalents / peers in any Head to head … , Yes, there is a huge progressive difference in sound quality between them empirically.