bigshot
Headphoneus Supremus
Reference sound isn’t necessarily “good sound”. It involves consistency and headroom, which are necessary for production, but is meaningless in your living room.
You don’t need to spend a fortune on Krell Generators and Gunga Dins. There are a million ways to achieve optimal sound, and many of them can be accomplished without spending five figures… in fact it’s possible without spending four figures.
People in audio forums spend all their time justifying their own purchases to themselves by telling others “You need a Krelm Valkyrie X-1.” instead of telling them the process they should go through to assemble a good system. The secret to great sound isn’t a brand name, and as soon as someone starts rattling off model numbers, you can safely discount most of what they say because their knowledge comes from advertising copy, not practical science.
Some parts of an audio system matter to the sound and some don’t. The best systems aren’t the most complicated and expensive. They’re the ones that are convenient and efficient at solving the problem.
Here’s a clue… if you find the right headphones, and match them with the right amplification, you can go to Amazon and throw a dart at the screen at a list of DACs and it will sound great. Every set of cans sound different. Find the one that sounds best to you and you won’t need coloration.
One of the best measuring consumer DACs is the $8 Apple dongle. Why pay a lot of money for what amounts to magic beans. Leave the expensive stuff to the chumps.
You don’t need to spend a fortune on Krell Generators and Gunga Dins. There are a million ways to achieve optimal sound, and many of them can be accomplished without spending five figures… in fact it’s possible without spending four figures.
People in audio forums spend all their time justifying their own purchases to themselves by telling others “You need a Krelm Valkyrie X-1.” instead of telling them the process they should go through to assemble a good system. The secret to great sound isn’t a brand name, and as soon as someone starts rattling off model numbers, you can safely discount most of what they say because their knowledge comes from advertising copy, not practical science.
Some parts of an audio system matter to the sound and some don’t. The best systems aren’t the most complicated and expensive. They’re the ones that are convenient and efficient at solving the problem.
Here’s a clue… if you find the right headphones, and match them with the right amplification, you can go to Amazon and throw a dart at the screen at a list of DACs and it will sound great. Every set of cans sound different. Find the one that sounds best to you and you won’t need coloration.
One of the best measuring consumer DACs is the $8 Apple dongle. Why pay a lot of money for what amounts to magic beans. Leave the expensive stuff to the chumps.
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