SonicAlbert said:
What you are saying is that spending big money on audiophile playback (or waterpicks) is not important to *you*, that YoYo Ma through your Yamaha CD changer is good enough for *you*. Everyone has different values.
That's exactly the point, Al.
And frankly I don't see how my bias - and yes I admit I do have a bias; it's called an opinion

- is any more ludicrous than the bias of someone who says that my Yamaha and Mackie listening combo isn't good enough for *them*. What's the difference? They believe that I'm wrong and I believe that they're wrong

. The fact is that they are both biases, they are both different points of view, and they are both based upon a set of internal values.
My value set is one where if I start becoming attracted to the idea of paying thousands of dollars for something so far down the list of life's priorities as a headphone amp, that red flags start popping up in my mind advising me that I'd better think about just how addicted to my hobby I'm actually getting. In my mind it's not about whether the buyer can afford it or not, or even if it's a headphone amplifier of God's own creation, it's about just how deep their addiction to such *things* is getting, and as to whether that just might be affecting their judgement.
Tied to that is the *fact* that even reputable companies know how to take advantage of such borderline obsession by offering products that, while they may (or may not) be superior, are not by any objective form of measurement such as performance specification or price, *as* superior as the price and the marketing pablum may suggest.
I honestly disagree with Brad on that point; there more often than not IS a law of diminishing return on just about anything having to do with techology price/performance (digital computing capacity and circuit density being obvious exceptions to this, of course). The disparity between price and performance as quality increases happens in at least two ways:
- Refinement of technology (note I'm not talking about breakthrough invention here, I'm talking abot making an existing product perform better) tends to have the characteristic where as more and more refinement is thrown into the design, the resulting improvements come in smaller an smaller increments. In just about any mature technology (and come on, amplifiers are a very mature technology) there comes a point where (just to use sample numbers for illustration) a doubling in refinement cost yields only a 10% increase in performance. The likely difference in measurable performance - especially in such a mature technology as audio amplification - between a $1000 headphone amp and a $2000 headphone amp is going to be on the order of just a few percent, and almost certainly nowhere near double the performance. As nice as that Bentley may be, it certainly does not have at $250K ten times the performance or engineering of a $25K Grand Prix GT or even five times the engineering and performance of a $50K BMW 5 series. Anybody who has enough self-earned discretionary money to be able to truely afford $2K for something like a seperate amplifier for their headphones has the economic saavy to understand that the return on that investment is - at the very least - not proportional, and can only be justified by the amount of desire they have for it. At that point they should be asking themselves if that amount of desire is rational or even healthy.
- The more top shelf a product is in any given line of products, the smaller the market for it. Let's face it; even Brad will agree that the percentage of population that can be considered even in the market for any outboar headphone amplifier whatsoever, let a lone a Bentley-class one, is miniscule. For this reason, the manufacturers have to put higher profit margins on their products in order to make money on those products; they don't have the economy of scale working for them. If headphone amplifiers were as ubiquitous as television sets, the retail price on that $2K headphone amp would sink faster than a stale matzoh ball. It costs $2K because they have to inflate the price enough to make it profitable enough to manuafcture at a low volume. One doesn't have to hear how it sounds to understand that. Again, as before, anybody with the financial saavy to afford it will understand that, and should ask themselves if it's worth paying that understandbly inflated price just to have "the best", and if it is, maybe wonder why it's so damn important for them to have "the best" to begin with.
And finally, for Al and for Brad especially, I sincerely hope you understand that I am coming at this thread with the understanding that it's a debate, not an argument. We obviously have differing opinions on this, as we are both entitled. The fact that I disagree with you on this point in no way diminishes my respect for you and in no way is intended as any kind of personal attack. We's just talkin' is all!
G.