Most eye-opening upgrade and what you learned


Would love to know about moments of light on the high-end audio learning curve.

My husband and I number among the academic poor ...
with preferences which substantially exceed our budget.
Nonetheless, we have managed an aha!! experience or
two of our own.

The mating of conrad johnson tube preamp with krell solid
state amp opened our eyes about the role of electronics
in creating presentation.

Listening to the revel salons set our standards for hearing music rather than sound from an audio playback system.

Know that many of you have deeper insight, am hoping you
will share.

Newcomer to audiogon
Judith
judit
Changing listening position- from far field to near field. Everything fell in place and parallax removed. All I had to do was try- at length. Try even closer than the famous sit-at-apex-of-equilateral-triangle rule, it may work for you.
Definitely the most eye opening experience I've had in this hobby was upgrading to my first quality analog rig (Goldmund Studio, Graham tonearm, Koetsu cartridge) from an old Audio Technica. It was as if I had found the music, not just the notes.
Welcome to the 'Gon Judit. I had the same experience as Nilthepill. I picked up a pair of Mirage MRM-1 Reference Monitors and tried them all over my listening room. Then I finally read the owner's manual after about a month of experimenting. The factory suggested "rule of thirds" put them in a near field listening position. All the room anomalies dissappeared. Soundstage went deep and wide. I now describe my listening experience as "headphone-like." Honestly, my system has never sounded better than in near field. Good luck. Erik
Kelly what a small world...
I'm about to embark upon the same ear-opening experience that you have already journeyed through years ago, that being analog upgrade. Recall my recent email reply to you (about being side-tracked) when I spotted & jumped upon a good turntable deal, which I'm still working on. I've had an older directdrive linear arm TT for years but I always knew something was amiss with the setup because the CD player sounds much better. Well I'm now doing something about that situation & this analog rig could well have belonged to you in the past? Yes it's the VPI HW19MK4 with a Grado Signature arm & the "analog survival kit" platter mat & arm wrap. It came with an older Grado cart. but I just ordered a Grado Statement Reference (the low output wood body model) & an Arcici Airhead platform. Also coming is a DB protractor, HFNRR test record, R.R.L. LP9, etc. I can't wait to get this rig going & hear some real analog at long last. Of course, any hints, tips, or experiences that you may wish to share will be most welcome & appreciated.