DIY can be just as good if not better than a comparable commercial amp. If you think about it, most of the time you can get the same or only slightly different parts that are used in commercial amps. What generally happens is DIY tends to be better because you can customize it to your taste and cans. DIY is jsut generally held back by the amount of money you have available at the moment. You may build an amp but not put a volume control in it until a while later when you get some more cash and then easily add it to your amp. Same thing with components. You can do the same with components such as capacitors, resistors, opamps. This is half the fun of DIY. The other half is the knowledge that you gain from it and also knowing you just built a better amp than most for a lot less that commercial cost.
I am just starting to get into this audio DIY and I fear it will be eating through my wallet for quite a while. Won't be as bad when I find a job, bust still as fun. Eventually I will get the rest of the parts for the Gilmore, evenyually I will have an amp to be proud of. But in the meantime, I enjoy thinking about the amp as much as building it will probably be.
A few years ago, I had an A47 all designed and had planned on CNCing the case out of solid aluminum. Well, college got a little more demanding and those plans got thrown in the basement of general daily things to do. Now that I am done with college, nothing to do but wait for a job, here I sit thinking about amps again
