Is it possible to get Hi-end sound ??


Hi guys,
Now, that I am inspired with this hobby, I would like to as you if is it possible to get Hi-end sound without to spend a fortune or selling the home ??
I am poor and want to find the way to do it if possible.
Some ideas !
Thanks,
Jorge.
dvjorge
My hi end audio gear (pro & hi fi) kept its value better than my house during the past few years. If you buy carefully, you won't loose much even if you're buying the good stuff.
Jorge,

At work I have a Yamaha CDC-765 5-Disc CD changer that has a headphone jack on the front. I listen through a pair of MB Quart 240 headphones. It's very nice!

Chuck
Not really. You can not buy a Bentley for the price of a Civic. Unfortunately, unlike Civics, which are finer cars than Bentleys in some ways, 2-ch hi-fi is such a tiny market now that economies of scale have disappeared. The time, effort and materials required to profitably make fine, low-volume products require relatively high prices. All is not lost: with research, intellignent selections, and buying used here on the Gon, you can achieve much better sound than you will ever hear from equipment intended for big-box appliance stores. If you want to hear simulated music at home, what other choice is there but to try?
Having a few pieces of legacy equipment was a great start for me. I'm so glad money is tight right now--I would have loved a new DAC, but my wife preferred a week and a half in Costa Rica--because my ignorance could easily take me down the rabbit hole.

Jorge, you've had some great responses. Get a budget, let the world open up. Be patient about the process. It's not really all about the sound, is it? Some people say, "Love the music, lust for equipment." I might change "lust" to "fetishize," but whatever. The point is, it seems like you're not sure how far you want to go--that is to say, I interpret the subtext of, say, "I want the best sound for the smallest outlay" as actually saying, "I'm eager but afraid and I need guidance." My two cents: spend enough money on it that you love your stuff enough to be a dork about it. Learn the equipment well enough to know what you like and don't like about it, and then proceed as resources allow. Same goes for wine and probably any other connoisseur-ish epicurean pursuit. If your experiment to grab some budget hi-fi doesn't cause the affliction of audiophilia, then you just saved yourself some money.