What is going on? No-one buys good stuff priced right.


There are Lamm hybrid monos, Rowland 8T, YBA Passion Integre and Lavardin integrateds, Dynaudio Contour and Confidence speakers,and that's only what I took a look at.
Too many choices, too much hesitation, no funds, not in the mood, summer time ?
inna
Maybe the prices are not so right. Example: There is a Sony CS/SACD player listed for $1,100. (or make an offer, to be fair.) This is the only option even remotely within my means. The others in my search here range from $2,200 to $35,500! The list price of the Sony is given as $3,500 in  about 1999. Actually, the list was dropped by Sony to $2,500 in 2001. So I would have to believe that the Sony depreciated only 56% over 18 years. I do not believe that and I don't think it is worth risking anywhere near that money on such an old unit. It was a fine player, and the price is in-line with those listed elsewhere; but not for me!

Does anyone want to buy my 2005 Subaru Outback wagon for $29,000? It only has 154,000 miles and the tires are outstanding. 
I've been using Agon for 15 years now (holy crap) and have gone thru so much equipment it makes me wonder. After retiring a few months ago, the time of needing newer, better, or just more equipment is over for me. It's been a nice ride though, and I have not just heard, but owned some extremely nice gear.

For some reason the thrill of owning and listening to the really nice stuff always seems to fade for me. I start thinking, "I paid $5k for this amp and is it making my listening any more satisfying?" My answer has always been "no, not really." The expensive stuff get's sold, and lately not through Audiogon.

What has been satisfying is finding pieces which offer equal (to my ear) sonic pleasure at a fraction of the price. Building Bottlehead kits comes immediately to mind. Or my latest project, finding a non-working Hafler amp and bringing new life to it with modifications. 

As I said, my stuff doesn't get sold through Agon anymore; they lost me during the big shake up a few years ago. Seemed like every time I went to list an item here the fee structure was different and there were other alternatives which worked just as well for me. When I joined this site, placing ads cost $2 it might've been $1 but my memory is fuzzy. It was a wonderful site for hobbyists. As with everything in life though, it changed. 

2channel8 has it right on the money, pun intended. I have slowed my buying to a crawl because the price of used gear is absurd. The prices reflect a depreciation that is just not realistic. I recently looked into a pair of speakers that were 16 years old and the owner was asking 70% of original price. I walked away.
I've noticed that the audio market has slowed down where Im at as well.  I've been trying to sell a pair of speakers for 8 months.  I've only received 1 lowball offer.  The speakers are priced well.  2 years old, light use at moderate levels, perfect condition, boxes etc.  Msrp was $1800.  I was asking $625.  Got an offer at $550.  Raised the price to $725 :)

Theres a company local to me that has started buying up the gear on craigslist in order to resell it at a higher price on their website.  I've seen gear sitting there for awhile as well (serves them right!).

I usually shift my focus to cars, motorcycles, and road trips in the summer.  As soon as snow starts blowing, I buy stereo gear again!

Well some other sites are not much better - I have gear fairly priced (I did a lot of research etc.) posted for 2 years...

As far as old school gear vs newer or SS vs tubes - we all have our preferences. I have a nice mix of fully recapped old school SS gear such as Sansui BA/CA 3000 with the 9900TU and 929 TT - nice but far from say my entry level Shindo gear or even the Almarro 318b which I got for a very reasonable price. I also have Pioneer Series20, Marantz Esotec, Kenwood Supreme700 and Yamaha 2000 Centennial Series with matching NS1000 speakers...Love them all.

However, one of the best sounding set was a mish-mash of Dodd battery powered preamp, Pass Labs Aleph Ono phono amp, Quicksilver Silver 70 mono-blocks with Kuzma Stabi/Stogi TT, SONY SACD ES777 and a McIntosh MR71. All from AG all for pretty decent/very fair price. It took me some time to assemble but it was worth the work/time. I also met nice folks either in person or at least through email.

YMMV - enjoy the music! 


This is a humble suggestion to sellers from a long time member who has sold many items on Audiogon over the years. Stop charging buyers for what are fees intended to be absorbed by the seller. PayPal fees were never intended to be paid by the buyer. Credit card fees were never intended to be by paid by the buyer. They are both a cost of doing business as the seller. If you feel compelled to recoup these fees simply raise you asking price to the next natural price point, for example: $550 to $575. I can only speak for myself but when I view an ad where the seller is trying to place seller fees on the buyer, I simply move on.
@tubegb I agree with your post. If I'm interested in an item I make an offer worded as such, "my offer is $$$ including shipping and fees." I leave it up to the seller to accept, counter offer or ignore. 
Vector3309,
Your English is poor so your rant is incomprehensible. Calm down and listen to some music.
Like many on this forum, I am approaching 60, and have been chasing the elusive perfect system for quite some time, limited by finances and the vicissitudes of real life, raising a family etc. We were discussing cars the other day-how that our parents often traded in theirs before the inevitable decline became apparent, often before 100k miles. Now, it’s not unheard of for people to still be driving vehicles from the early oughts, with several hundred thousand miles on them. Why? Perhaps coincident or not, once sticker prices got so high that leasing became a real option, quality seemed to rise almost exponentially, and those high prices also made buying new less of an option for many, so they held onto what they had, paying for the odd repair rather than having a regular loan payment.

I suggest, for different reasons, that the same thing has happened in our audiophilic universe-I recently replaced a pair of Spica TC-50s that have served me well for over 30 years with a pair of Magneplanar MG 1.5 QR’s that I purchased from the original owner. The quality of both sets of speakers, while scarcely new, is still apparent and I chose not to spend time researching every possible option. What was built and designed well has held up and still has value-and the cost of a fair amount of new equipment is stratospheric. But, people’s needs change, making some equipment, no matter how much of a bargain, unfeasible. Some of that is the result of people integrating what at one time was their main stereo system into their television’s audio system. Do you need a pair of monoblocks to reproduce a movie’s sound? For most, the answer is no. In other cases, downsizing one’s household leads to living back in a condominium or other facility that precludes a large system’s use in favor of headphone or bookshelf speakers.

Like the cars, the quality of many of the products used in our hobby has risen above what we would have found back in the 1970s. I still use my 30 year old Hafler DH-220 regularly - and it is perhaps the best $300 or so I ever spent in terms of value for cost when I consider the hundreds of hours it has served me. If and when it dies, I will explore the Brystons and other options available and will likely purchase used rather than new-again seeking brands I know and trust. In conclusion, there’s a surplus of good equipment available at very reasonable prices but for some of us, there are no pressing demands to buy right now.
Why die HIGH END? We have to sanction the ruble to the dollar was 22/1. I'm going to buy STEALTH SAKRA interconnect 1 meter - $ 12,000 for 264.000 rubles. In terms of sanctions, I could not buy, because now SAKRA cable is three times more expensive -768.000₽. This is for you to buy for $ 36,000 per 1 SAKRA, unreal.      https://youtu.be/6MVFU_NKwaE                                                          https://youtu.be/0SgytF9djBU                                                              https://youtu.be/J1UlN4eHIUE  -. The BEST SOUND
As others alluded, the issue may be price.....items are priced at unrealistic levels.   To that I would add size of audience.   There are other sales venues with larger audiences.    Several times in the past, I have listed identicle items at identicle prices on Agon, Audiomart, Audio Asylum and Ebay.    All items sold via Ebay, at my listing price (BIN).   Agon listings generated a lot of questions, several very low offers, and -0- consumated sales.  Very few inquiries etc from Audiomart, or Audio Asylum.   Items were mid 3 figure cables, vintage tube amps, and premium tubes.  

in monitoring Agon forums, I note that participants here seem to exhibit considerably more anxiety about equipment, buying, selling, tweeking etc..  People should relax.   This is a hobby.   Stop treating it like a pool of sharks trying to steal food from each other.   
tubegb...
Bravo!  I find it annoying that most of the equipment for sale here tacks on the PayPal fee in addition.  While I know that we're not retailers or business owners (for the most part), imagine using your credit card in a store and having the cashier say, "oh, a card?  We have to charge you another 3-4 percent."   

I've made offers here pretty much doing as you've done yourself, here's my offer all inclusive.  Most have refused, politely and nicely.  This is, IMHO, a "gentleman's" community in which respect and understanding go both ways.

The rich are getting richer, and the poor are getting poorer, while those in the middle are slowly being sucked into that vortex called poverty. In order to verify this, all you have to do is search "Poverty", or homelessness.

Recently there was a lively conversation about 20K tone arms. Can you imagine the wealth surrounding someone who would spend 20K for a tone arm? When I was in real estate I came into contact with wealthy people, and none of them would spend 20K for a tone arm; that's because they were all quite frugal. While I don't know if any of them were audiophiles, because the conversation never wandered off of business, I know that none of them were frivolous. My point is that 20K for a tone arm is not something they would do, unless recently they had come into so much money they could afford to be frivolous.

Now the "Upper middle class" is feeling pinched; that's because no longer can they buy very expensive gear without giving it much consideration. This group of audiophiles has been so focused on "Audiophilia" that they have not been to concerned with realities that are just beginning to affect them. Let me clue you in on some of them.

It takes "generations" to construct a "ghetto"; a generation is 70 years. 70 years ago St. Louis was a great city, and so was Detroit. In the last 20 years those cities have declined like nobody would believe; the only things that have increased are the sizes of the ghettos, and this goes for every major city in the United States of America.

In 66 I was in Detroit, and it seemed that everyone drove a new car, and lived in a swell home with a "rathskeller", and they dressed well; that also went for Pontiac and Flint, Michegan. What does all that have to do with you? I can't answer that question, you will have to answer it for yourself.

Since 2006 the wealth of this entire country has shifted "big time" from the middle class to the very rich, and the pace of that shift is only increasing.

When you put frogs in a kettle of water, and raise the temperature slowly, they will be boiled before they know it's too hot. The prices of all our necessities are constantly increasing, and it's not due to natural circumstances; the rich who rule all the politicians, Democrat and Republican, are making sure the prices of all necessities are increasing.



Enjoy the music while you still can.



Orpheus10, you are right about while we still can. Climate change will finish all this off soon enough, rich and not rich will have the same fun.
$20k for a great tonearm sounds reasonable to me. How about $50k for Hermes handbag or $3k for a bottle of wine?

Inna, 20K for a tone arm; when are you going to invite me to your chateau. I just got back with the material to construct a table for my TT, and I'm going to re-record all my LP's after I receive and install the new cartridge. After that, all I'm going to do is;

Enjoy the music.
You see, I didn't say that I could ever afford it or that I would buy it even if I could. I always spend less than I can. 
Please pretend you never read my previous post. (most of you won't have to pretend)

I, too am outraged and saddened that no one is buying this perfectly wonderful gear. It is age discrimination, just as plain as the nose on my face, and it sickens me!

I propose to start a charitable fund to find a good home for each piece of worthy gear. Let us band together and open our wallets until every Dias is in a den and every Lamm has a living room.!

Just send your donations to me at **CENSORED by AG**

I am happy to do my part for Volunteers for the Benefit of  Acoustic Perfection. V-BAP. (Isn't that something Ella sang?)

I will keep a judicious inventory of all pieces liberated from Agon. But adoptive parent(s) must remain anonymous.  
I sold it all just before the market collapsed.

Small and cheap beats big and expensive.

I only include the paypal fee if the buyer insist on the process going through with paypal.

I typically would accept cash or a bank certified check or a personal check for a purchase and would ship the item only when my bank tells me the check actually cleared.

I understand the buyer is slightly at risk in that transaction, but I prefer this as opposed to me shipping the item and the check failed to clear.

So, if they insist on using paypal, which to me is a pain to use, I tell the customer that they will be responsible for the paypal fees.

I could tack the paypal fee on the sale price initially, but that doesn't make sense to me, because once you list a price, that is the price.  If the customer wants to pick the item up and pay cash (for example), why am I penalizing that person by tacking on the paypal fee?

anyway, my two cents worth.

Enjoy

I could tack the paypal fee on the sale price initially, but that doesn't make sense to me, because once you list a price, that is the price.


99.9% of the time, the list price is NOT the price.
On the other hand, considering everything that contributes to the current state of things, prices might not be right. 
If I had the $20k to blow on a tonearm without suffering my lot in life I probably could justify the expenditure without aforethought.  

Just because something is out of my reach financially does not make those who can afford it dupes - it's simply a matter of perceived value to the buyer. Excesses of the wealthy are hardly new to anyone here or elsewhere. Most of my friends and colleagues find my stuff "expensive" when by comparison with other members my stuff is relatively inexpensive. C'est la vie. 

There is no "problem" with 2 channel listening other than it requires dedication. 99% of the people I know do not have two channel equipment. Personally speaking my TV is in the den, my 2 channel gear in the living room. I do not have surround sound for the TV,  I find surround to be intolerable. Most of my acquaintances are just fine with their HT setups

The good stuff isn't moving as quickly because the audience for it is much smaller than it's ever been. I'm tired of parties where people Bluetooth their music over some big box store wireless speakers and find it acceptable. Ugh. 

I'm doing my best to sustain the purchases of good stuff but my finances ebb and flow!
There have been several interesting answers above and I'd like to offer some more.....

We are living in a time when even relatively "inexpensive" gear has gotten really good sounding.  If you've been in this hobby for any length of time, you start to realize that the more expensive the gear is, doesn't always mean better sounding.  Having gone to several shows like AXPONA, it becomes clear that most of the uber expensive rooms sound ok....not great.  I started making it a game to seek out the lesser known companies to hear their gear and compare them to the better known names.  In almost every case, the smaller companies produced gear that sounded as good or better than the others.  Many of them were also made in the US which is a big plus for me.  The customer service tends to be stellar with these manufacturers.

I also believe there is a move toward simplification with gear.  I'm over 50 and I'm getting tired of lifting amps and preamps that weigh over 75 lbs or 45 lbs respectively.  After 2 back surgeries, I'm not willing to take the chance anymore.

I've decided to move to speakers that are higher efficiency and integrateds that don't weight 65 lbs, but sound really good.  An example would be to compare one of the choices the OP gave:  Lavardin.  I've owned the IT and it sounds good, but I recently heard about a small company from the UK by the name of Sonneteer and decided to give them a try at a fraction of the price.  In my system, the Sonneteer Alabaster is a much more musical and enjoyable integrated amp.  It retails for $2400 and the Lavardin IT retails for $9500 (I believe).  A no brainer.  

I also hear from other audio friends that they are nervous about the economy and with the prices of used gear falling like a rock, they are holding on to what they have.  I think the word used above by audiotomb was content.  

I've also noticed that more and more of my friends would rather spend some extra money going to local concerts now rather than keep chasing the unobtainable.

Just my 2 cents.
I couldn't agree more!  I've attended many shows in Canada/US and over seas and have sat in front of systems worth many times the price of my home, yes they sounded great, looked great and I enjoyed talking to the designers/owners of the company.  But, I'll always come back to brands I've heard and trusted for years, Sonneteer being one of them.  The Alabaster is one that I've owned/sold for 12 years and it continues to put a smile on my face every time I hear it and that for me is the most important factor in deciding to put your money down on a piece of gear.  

Does it make you happy when you listen to it?

Scott Wylde
US/Canadian Agent for Sonneteer
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