Audiophile Equipment


I learned the value of audiophile equipment early in my pursuit of the high end. I had accumulated enough gear for a system and was looking for the best possible tape deck… with Dolby C. From the popular magazines… Stereo ReviewStereo Times… the Harman Kardon T392 seemed to represent the pinnacle. So I bought one. It was OK… but such a huge step down from vinyl that I was genuinely bummed, especially since it cost something like $650… a lot of money at the time.

A few months later I was browsing a high-end audio shop and, somewhat morosely, told my story to a salesman. He just started laughing. “Those things are junk… you need a real tape deck.” He led me over to the window, where there was a seven-year-old used Nakamichi 1000… huge, with wood paneling all around it… looking more like a reel-to-reel than a cassette deck. He wanted $1,200 for it. That was an astronomical amount of money… and it was old. Then he said, “Take it home… try it.”

My first real jaw-drop moment.

It had the full depth and bass of vinyl… it was simply astonishing. It made the so-called “flagship” Harman Kardon sound like a cheap plastic transistor radio and without Dolby C.  All that glossy magazine talk about bandwidth and specs… page after page of marketing… well, that’s all it was. This old, purpose-built audiophile machine performed leagues above the consumer-level product.

I was hooked.

It wasn’t my last audiophile purchase… but it was my last consumer-level purchase for decades.

ghdprentice

It's nice to have vintage audio equipment. I have enough to chance my set up.Ive just been changing my speakers, because I have forgotten how certain models sound ,hey I'm 74.lol

@mapman I had a Tandberg cassette deck. It rewound so quickly that it broke tapes. It had lead weights around the wheels for the drives. 

My first real high end bit of kit was a Phase Linear 400 that true to form blew up. The ADS 710 speaker’s in use survived. Used a B&O turn table then. It was inexpensive. Had those boss speakers for a long long time untill Braun 810’s. After rent and my music jonesing fed there wasn’t a lot left. Happy days for a young clueless buck. Less was more. 

How does one categorize consumer-grade versus audiophile-grade gear? Is it based on perception, professional review ratings, or price (again)?  How one avoid perception or confirmation biase.

@ghdprentice I modified the Marantz 7C a bit using recommendations for upgrading given to me in a letter by Saul Marantz himself. I only used it for 5 years as my front-line preamp until I replaced it with an Audio Research SP6B preamp in 1981. The Audio Research had a far more specific sound stage with much tighter bass, but the Marantz soundstage stretched wall-to-wall, while the SP6B only went from speaker to speaker and had this "paper ships on a paper sea" image, not as holographic as the Marantz. 

Funny story: the Marantz paid for my moving from Northwestern University to the University of British Columbia (post-docs) because the moving truck had a leak and soaked the box the Marantz was in. Based on a repair estimate from an audio shop for rebuilding, they settled for $3000 and let me keep the preamp (!). The preamp worked fine after I replaced some connectors and a few capacitors. I later traded it in for a set of new speakers in 2003 (ATC's), so it was quite the investment return for $200 non-working in 1976!