I think you're missing my point...you continue to talk about gear that is not functioning correctly, which is not the case in my situation.

I'm talking about a basic listening experience, and no, I'm NOT talking about a skewed, faulty images...rather just one that is more 3-D and more "organic", where the digital one may be more "neutral" or more "accurate", but it also sounds a bit sterile and confined.
Maybe I'm reading you wrong, but you seem to be convinced that analog just can't possible ever sound better than digital...?...and that's fine if you are, it's your ears and your experience, but I think you need to also accept that for many people, it does. You also should accept that it may be exactly all those "bad" qualities of analog, those things that DO color and change the sound in some way that are exactly what some people perceive as "better" and/or more pleasant sounding.
I can appreciate that some folks want the more neutral & accurate approach...but neutral & accurate doesn't always = better sounding.
Why do so many digital processes attempt to mimic some analog process?
Why is that such a major selling point of so many digital apps?
Why do most pros admit that all those emulations of classic analog gear may sound really good, but still are not the same as the analog devices and most would prefer to use the analog devices if they had both them and the emulations sitting side-by-side?
Is all that analog gear "broken" or faulty...?