How old were you when audio gear first caught your interest?


Wondering how old people were when they first started to get interested in audio gear. 
 

I first heard of Dual and Acoustic Research when I was around 13, but it did nothing for me, however, by the time I was 15 or 16 I definitely was interested. A relative had a Dual turntable, Scott receiver, Tandberg reel to reel and Rectilinear speakers (and he still has that gear, and the Rectilinears are still in use).  I remember helping him get the speakers into his apartment. I also knew of Thorens. 

That’s all back in the 70’s 

 

 

zavato

When I was 6 (1954), my two brothers and I watched a B&W TV in a console, I think an Admiral. 

I was the designated 'slapper', I had the magic touch to slap it on the side, to straighten out the picture ... I had no idea I was jiggling tubes inside of it.

Age 40, Quit Smoking, what Incentive might help?

I decided, the bills were getting paid (just barely), so as a treat, to help me quit, I would spend my tobacco money on Music or Music Equipment. 

A carton a week then, 1988, was $700. a year, that was my budget.

Well, I gave myself a ’rise in pay’ along the way, whatever 52 cartons cost, that’s my new limit. It got up to over $3,500/year before I stopped when I retired, it’s probably over $5,000. now.

I never thought what over 20 years of Smoking Money would add up to.

Anybody still smoking? Do it!

Oh Yeah, Inheritance. I inherited $8,000 many years ago. I bought a NEW Onkyo Integra System: Receiver/CD/Dual Cassette some other NEW stuff I forget

I grew up in a household that had a table-top radio/phono combo that played only 78s (with osmium-tipped styli) and, although I was an avid music listener as a kid, I never paid any attention to the sound because I had nothing with which to compare it.

However, around 1953, my grade school buddy’s parents bought a VoM console that played LPs and, on a visit, he played a Mantovani LP.  I was amazed by what I visuallized as a cascade of violins pouring out of this box.  It was stunning.

After 2 years of voracious reading, I became the owner of a primitive component system (record changer, integrated amp, bookshelf speaker) and I was hooked before I even got to high school.

My best friend and I were just discussing this. When we were about 16 we would take the speakers off the Sears "portable" stereo (turntable folded up into the box)... about $49 in 1967 and put them on the floor and put our head in between the speakers. The bass was great at 2"

So, there are stories a few years earlier of me listening with my ear to the speaker  late at night to the tube counsel in my bedroom at whisper volume so my parents would not hear. But, I'll put my stake at 16.

My father bought an all-tube Fisher system in a console cabinet in 1964 when I was five years old. It came with a Dual turntable and a Teac reel-to-real. He knew what he was doing - his Bachelor's Degree was in engineering physics from the electrical engineering department school and he was in grad school having finished his Master's in physics. He knew electronics. And I was fascinated.

I bought my first system with my paper route earnings (I saved up for over a year). at Christmas time 1974 when I was 15. It was a Pioneer SX-636, Fischer XP88 speakers, and a Dual 1215 w/ a Stanton cartridge. 

I was on my way,

On was on my way