WHEN DID THIS PART OF THE FORUM EVER OPEN UP? LOL
post #76 of 209
8/16/08 at 12:27pm
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I still dont consider cans like the 580,SA5000,AKG 701, to be high end, along with many others. putting the 580 on the same pedistal as the R10 is silly, but many do.. Unless we have ultra hi end headphones.
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| For example: Principle 1 The primary purpose of the gear is to reproduce quality audio. This immediately would exclude gaming headphones, and playstations (their primary purpose is to play games). |
| Principle 2 Portable gear is not High-end. This might be contentious, but I'll throw it in anyway. |
| Principle 3 Value for money is not the primary purchasing or evaluation consideration. High-end audio is not all about the best bang-for-buck. It is about the purist pursuit of the best audio reproduction - to your ears, and to your budget. |
| Principle 4 There are no small improvements that are not worth chasing. High-end audio is about chasing those final improvements. Cable discussions, DBT and proving that a tweak is scientifically valid is NOT part of high-end audio. |
| Principle 5 Skeptics need not apply. If you are skeptical of the worth, value or benefit of any equipment, tweak or improvement - you are probably too focussed on the value for money equation; that is not high-end audio. |
| Principle 6 High-end audio does not need to subject itself to DBT. This would be akin to arguing that the owner of a Ferrari should prove that his car is better than your VW beetle. |
| Principle 7 High-end audio is about what you want rather than what you need. If you can't understand why anyone would buy a $1 Million dollar car or a $25,000 watch, then you probably won't understand high-end audio either. |
| Principle 8 High-end audio can include DIY. Whether it be cables, DACs or Amps (even headphones), there are many DIYers whose primary goal is the pursuit of the best quality audio. Just because a product has a brand name doesn't make it any better - remember, the focus is on the ability to reproduce the best quality audio not how fancy it looks. |
| Principle 9 High-end audio can include older and used equipment. Just because something is old doesn't exclude it from being high end. Older equipment offers terrific opportunities for high-end audio at decent prices. Used high-end equipment is still high end equipment - think classic cars. |
| This group should not be elitist, but it should allow free discussion about the pursuit of the best quality audio - including questions from newbies (but please, not the 'High end amp for $300 questions'). |

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Given that the purpose of a high end system is to reproduce music with the fewest compromises, rather than define exactly what gear is high end, it might be easier to put some constraints around what isn't. That is to say, perhaps a principle approach rather than a $ or a subjective assessment approach
For example: Principle 1 The primary purpose of the gear is to reproduce quality audio. This immediately would exclude gaming headphones, and playstations (their primary purpose is to play games). |
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Principle 2
Portable gear is not High-end. This might be contentious, but I'll throw it in anyway. |
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Principle 3
Value for money is not the primary purchasing or evaluation consideration. High-end audio is not all about the best bang-for-buck. It is about the purist pursuit of the best audio reproduction - to your ears, and to your budget. |
|
Principle 4
There are no small improvements that are not worth chasing. High-end audio is about chasing those final improvements. Cable discussions, DBT and proving that a tweak is scientifically valid is NOT part of high-end audio. |

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Principle 5
Skeptics need not apply. If you are skeptical of the worth, value or benefit of any equipment, tweak or improvement - you are probably too focussed on the value for money equation; that is not high-end audio. |
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Principle 6
High-end audio does not need to subject itself to DBT. This would be akin to arguing that the owner of a Ferrari should prove that his car is better than your VW beetle. |

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Principle 7
High-end audio is about what you want rather than what you need. If you can't understand why anyone would buy a $1 Million dollar car or a $25,000 watch, then you probably won't understand high-end audio either. |

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Principle 8
High-end audio can include DIY. Whether it be cables, DACs or Amps (even headphones), there are many DIYers whose primary goal is the pursuit of the best quality audio. Just because a product has a brand name doesn't make it any better - remember, the focus is on the ability to reproduce the best quality audio not how fancy it looks. |
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Principle 9
High-end audio can include older and used equipment. Just because something is old doesn't exclude it from being high end. Older equipment offers terrific opportunities for high-end audio at decent prices. Used high-end equipment is still high end equipment - think classic cars. |
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This my 2 cents worth. These are not rules to be applied strictly- but more to shape thinking.
This group should not be elitist, but it should allow free discussion about the pursuit of the best quality audio - including questions from newbies (but please, not the 'High end amp for $300 questions'). Newbies should only come armed with sensible questions or views, that have actually been researched. |

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I still dont consider cans like the 580,SA5000,AKG 701, to be high end, along with many others. putting the 580 on the same pedistal as the R10 is silly, but many do.. Unless we have ultra hi end headphones.
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. Enjoy.