New and searching


I’m a new entrant to the world of hi fidelity. Being new, I have quite a bit of ignorance on this subject, but I’ve been trying to educate myself by reading forums, articles, and seeking advice from others. There is so much to consider, and I am am perplexed on what to focus on to better my system and listening experience. I am seeking the crawl, walk, run approach to building my system building my system. I want to provide any upgrades over a period of time, so I can learn to enjoy them and find a true appreciation for the improvements they provide. It appears to me that this is a never ending pursuit and I am fine with that. I just need some advice on what are the next three or four things I should focus on next to best improve my sound quality and listening experience. Should I consider investment in speakers, amp, pre amp, cables, power cords, room treatment, sub(s), etc.?

i have a dedicated 14x14  listening area with an angled 8 ft ceiling in an open floor plan space (area opens to another area in the home), the listening area is carpeted. I listen to a variety of genres of music, classical, jazz, blues, some country;  but primarily Americana rock and classic rock. 

The current components in my system are:

McIntosch MA5200 integrated amplifier
Clearaudio Concept turntable with Satisfy tonearm
Rotel 1072 CD player
Audioquest speaker cables (lower end)
Definitive BP10 speakers

My budget for upgrades in the next year is $10K.

I appreciated the knowledge shared in these forums and any that could be imparted on me as to my best investments over the next year is greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,


truetobluez

Showing 1 response by willemj

The speakers are clearly the weakest link and always have the biggest impact on the final sound. So I would spend the full budget on those, unless you also want to go into streaming audio.
As for speakers, how about the Harbeth SuperHL5+? I am not sure how much these would cost in the US, but I guess they would deplete much of the budget (they are worth it). Don’t waste any money on snake oil like cables. However, as others have said, do invest a bit of money into a calibrated measurement microphone like the UMIK-1 and familiarize yourself with the free REW software to analyze room response. Speakers are the weakest link in any system, and their in-room response is worse again.
Your amplifier should be fine, although at some time in the future you might want to opt for more power, depending on your listening habits.
If you want to try streaming, a Chromecast Audio is a cheap ($35) and remarkably good entry to discover if you like the idea. The inbuilt DAC is fine for 16/44 (i.e. cd) quality, but if you want more it also has an optical digital output (but you would need a DAC for that).
If at some stage you want to integrate your video system with your stereo system (a smart move), an Oppo 205 UHD Bluray player is all you need to play discs, and is an excellent external DAC for streaming.