Quality required to hear vinyl


I'm interested in putting together a system that is good enough tell the difference between a CD and vinyl. I want to hear why people still buy and listen to vinyl.

Currently I'm looking at:

musical fidelity a5
Epos M16i Floorstanding Speakers
and a Rega P3 or P5

Is this going to send me into vinyl bliss, or should I quit till I have much more cash...

Thanks,
Bill
bigbillc
As you can tell from Mechans post,there is a lot more to getting good analog sound than just adding a turntable and throwing on an album.While this may give you a hint,it will no way lead to analog bliss.Diligent maintenance is a must with analog systems if you want to keep them sounding their best.I love analog sound but am too lazy to perform the upkeep so I stick with digital.Just a thought.
one media is not always better than another, so this should be a good trick..
6 months ago, out of curiosity I reinvested in vinyl after a 10 year lapse. The differences are not subtle. Last month there was a $75,000.00 turntable sold on Agon but for under 1000 you can put together a respectable analog rig. However it takes some work/maintenance and there is an annoying new set of variables, MM vs MC, SS vs tube phono stage, speed controllers, isolation and other tweeks and more interconnects. Rewards are finding discarded mint records for 25 cents at thrift stores and enjoyable music, but I REALLY miss skipping to the next song with the remote
Bill, what system components are you using now for digital?

My first suggestion is to take your favorite two cd's, then buy the same records, and take them into an audio shop that will let you listen to them ad nauseum, and then decide if you think there is a difference big enough for you to take the plunge.

Once the kids left the roost I decided it was time to listen to the 3,000+ lp's I still owned, and didn't spend as much money on the vinyl rig as the digital one, yet there is a significant difference in many recordings, others not so much.

I'm using a 20+ year old Luxman table that has a good arm on it, and an entry level Graham Slee 2 SE phono preamp along with a Sumiko Pearl cartridge--I've spent more on Cartridges trying to get the sound I like, that's important.

Probably the biggest thing people skip when getting into vinyl is a record cleaner...IT IS CRITICAL, otherwise you've spent money that can't get the most out of the vinyl...even the manual one from Gemalog works great, and isn't that expensive.

When I get done putting the lp's on the hard drive I'll sell you my rig, but that's taking much longer than I ever thought it would.

Good luck