Ha. Thanks. My last big cull was also about soul searching, but it was a happier occasion. I feel like I’m doing even more soul searching this time, but it’s coming from a sense of my body’s slow (but speeding up) amble toward oblivion. Yeah, moderate hearing loss is a small thing, but I have a long history of reacting poorly to my body falling apart/breaking/aging. I have unreasonably high standards for myself (yes, I have a therapist).
I’m not selling off all my gear or anything so stark. But I did take sale photos of everything, box everything up, and store it in a closet. I’m now giving myself a couple of months where I pull things out of those boxes when I crave them. Anything left in boxes after those couple of months will get sold. The Project M and Elegia had already been on the fence before all of this, so they were the low-hanging fruit.
I’m still around, just less active and not obsessing about keeping up with the thread the way I had been. Better for my mental health at the moment. I really appreciate your reply. This is a special thread.
Glad to see you back, dude.
I turn 60 next month. I was a cross-country and track runner for a good high school program and Division I college and have tried to stay pretty fit in the last 38 years since graduation. But nobody beats time. Your body does age and break down -- it's as inevitable as death and taxes.
But I have found a way to cope with my diminished physical capabilities: Focus on where your fitness is NOW compared to others in your demographic instead of your body and ability in your teens and 20s. I'll bet that you're still far more fit and strong now compared to most dudes your age. I know I am. That sustains me.
Rather than lament what was lost, my energy is devoted toward maintaining as much as I can, staying more fit than most 60-year-old dudes and FIGHTING decline every remaining second of my life by staying mentally and physically active. Work with what you have rather than worrying about what was. The past is out of your control; grab the present by the balls.
Sure, we're all on a slide to oblivion. But you can take mental and physical steps toward making that chute as long and flat as possible.
You can do it, dude. Good luck. Always here for you with an ear.
At first glance, I thought your graph was showcasing each tuning iteration of the upcoming KZ EQ Pro.
LOLOLOL. Best Disco thread laugh of the month for me!
10K pages….. It is insane

. All thanks to @Dsnuts
Thanks,
@Dsnuts for starting this thread and for everyone welcoming me here in the last 15 months. It is a truly special place.
But as for 10K, pshhh, I treat it like birthdays -- it's just a number. I got just as much value out of page #9751, and I'm sure I will from page #10427. But while the number is irrelevant to me, your fellowship and knowledge are not, fellas.
You could eventually share some of those codes
I can't really get the point of those tariffs...in the end it'll be the companies losing (losing customers / having an huge decrease in sales) and the US people (paying so much more, or not buying at all)...
There is no point other than gross incompetence.
I used to think so many sets I bought were thin sounding. But I'm now leaning more towards cleaner presentations.
I'm with you, dude. I migrated toward the warmer "meta" tuning last summer and still really enjoy it. I did that because I thought I was VERY treble-sensitive despite higher-frequency hearing loss, mainly because of my ferocious tinnitus.
But I think part of that perceived treble allergy was caused by listening to so many headphones and IEMs with poor- to mid-quality treble. I've listened to so many sets/cans with grainy, shouty, glaring, spiky and piercing treble that I thought it was me.
Then I auditioned the BrainDance and Project M last winter thanks to the generosity of Disco threaders, and it was a parting of the Red Sea moment for me. Both of those sets have clean, clear, REFINED treble. While extending quite far, the treble in neither of those sets hits me wrong in any spot.
My swing from warm-neutral toward more bright-neutral sets accelerated when I also got my smokin' deal on the Hype 2 at $150 a few weeks ago. The Hype 2 features a light V-shape, which is great for my preferred genres of rock and classic rock. The treble sharpness walks right to the edge of my acceptable limit, perhaps even placing a few toes over the edge. But it never crosses. Ever. Just magic for me.
My two newest sets, the Aether and Volume S, also are more airy and crisp in the treble than the sets they will replace, the T10 and Explorer.
Moral of this tale: Keep your ears and brain open to new signatures and the evolution of your preferred signature. Maybe you will find audio nirvana with a certain signature. But chances are, everyone's tastes will continue to evolve and shape-shift. That's one of the aspects of this wonderful hobby that keeps it fresh for me: Tuning is changing; so is my perception of it.