Top Ten "Reasons I Don't Like This Component"


Many of us have had the short term experience of demoing or acquiring a piece of gear that, when we installed it in our systems, we soon realized that it wasn’t going to work.

An example I recently cited was after home demoing a CJ 17LS preamp years ago. I couldn’t stand the banging sound of the volume relays while adjusting. The unit sounded fine enough musically but this particular feature was intolerable.

What other features or quirks of components have you had similar experiences with over the short term? I’m not talking about chronic upgraditis, which most of us are afllicted with, just short term experiences that make us say, "this does not work for me."

No need to list ten reasons, just one or two. I'll keep a tab on them and summarize later.
stevecham

generally speaking....

1 speakers whose binding posts are separated too far apart. von S 4JR were 20 inches or so really stretching the bi wires i had at the time. or forcing the use of jumpers or shotgun wiring.


2 preamps whose on/off switches used toggle switches similar to knife switches that were thin and extend from the face plate inordinately far. they were prone to breaking off in shipping. and, did.


3  getting upscale ubber sensitive audio gear and realizing you have a ground loop issue from your CATV rig and having to chase that down.


4 sub woofers whose controls are all on their rear panel and have no remote controls.


5  thinking a new ??? will fix the issue you have but then finding out it was merrely a synergy issue with miss matched components.


6 being told a prospective amp is fresh out of the box and that it will ease up after break in, but finding out that is the way it sounds once broken in after all!



7  eg., above but with speakers.


8  eg., same as above with anything else.


9 hearing that soft swoosh as the preamp volume is controlled up  or down with the remote. Although it stops once you are at the what ever volume, but it does tend to annoy at times.


10 owning mannually biased mono amps…. and suffering from bias checking anxiety. 


11 Buying a new pre/pro or receiver whose operation manual is more than 150 pages. actually if its more than 30 or 40 will be enough to lite the irritation fires. 


lastly, components whose IEC inlets are all over the place, right hand side, left hand side, and or in the middle making for dressing power cords a real mess.


Being at a level where the average component is a couple thou, guess I just have a hard tine imagining people throwing that kind of money around without due consideration. Not my style. This whole subject is like from Mars to me. I would have to be nuts to spend that kind of money so frivolously. Never happened. Not even once. 
expensive tube preamps that the company could have properly engineered and afforded to install balanced connections along with rcas. thinking conrad johnson for example. no rational business would eschew over 1/2 of the potential market over this issue. don’t even start that it’s for better sound as many audio companies have great sound and both types of connectors. 
Millercarbon, let me guess, you were not buying high end gear (or sports cars) in the 1960s and 1970s. Half the stuff was ergonomically hostile, underdesigned, or required constant attention from techs. 

That didnt stop many of us for reaching for the gold ring, and trying to get the best sound that we could. You may see reliability and ergonomics as equal parts of the package, but there is a whole subset of the hobby that is comfortable throwing them out the window in the search for better sound. There is plenty of due consideration involved; some folks may just value things differently than you do.