I hear what you say. To someone like me $4000 would be the end of the world. I nearly came to that end just on my speakers alone. It's just far too dangerous, this aspect of the hobby. With that and the fact that I have very little to no disposable income, a real fear of diminishing returns and live a stress-filled life where even with my skills in music therapy I only get a few minutes rest pit from it at any time and it is not often enough. No hobby is worth being put down, brow-beaten, etc. I've invested less than 5 digits in this hobby and it's more than I care to. I guess my love for the hobby is rather shallow based on that aspect and so be it. I thought the meaning of this hobby or the encompassing meaning anyway was to share discoveries in music and helpful gear and tips and info to make best use of what any one of us has on hand. There's nothing wrong with expensive gear for anyone who can afford it, but it can't be made the standard of measurement and should never be used to humiliate those of us who can not even dream of affording it or even anyone who could,but doesn't want it for that matter. Often times I am lead to believe that the meaning of this hobby is to out-spend each other and that's a club I can't begin to belong to.
What frustrates me most is the fact that people tell me that because I'm not spending x amount or don't have the same gear that I could not possibly get the same or similar results from what I have all while I am getting said results. It doesn't make sense.
This is great Eric that we're having a civilized analog discussion in one of the very best and most friendly and open audio forum of the entire Wide Web World.
We have the right to our opinions, and the right to ask the right questions as well. And if that right is denied to us, then nothing intelligent can come out of it, and we don't learn anything and we become slave of the people who are imposing (with or without their own knowledge) their restricted or dominating or highly biased or financially motivated or one-way views!
If we don't ask questions, how can we be certain for sure of what people are saying?
Should we simply believe everyone around us?
Thing is this: Without respect you are a nobody. Plain and simple. It's not because you are a pro that you are doing everything right.
Again, if you insult your kids playing in their sandbox, by yelling at them or swearing or telling names, no matter how big and how important your job is or was you are a nobody.
The Klaudio seems to be the real deal; until another better one and less expensive one is discovered by someone else.
And then, what's the use to pay fifty dollars for a remastered album by the greatest record label, if you need to clean it first to take full advantage of its superior sound quality?
Question like that will get you banned from some audio forums! Well, it did to me after it was deleted and then I asked that it been restored.
My deepest love in my audio evolution is with the turntable and the music records (albums).
And the more I tried to manually clean my LPs the more they sounded awful!
Because I simply did not have the right technique; I was making things worst by spreading the debris all over my LPs!
Do you know how frustrating is that?
But when I was a kid I wasn't anal like that and din't clean my LPs with special fluids, and special machines with motors and ionizer and and all that jazz; just a simple cleaning brush (that good old one with wood on top) and few drops of distilled water mixed with a little bit of isopropyl alcohol; few seconds, that's all.
Now, I got three turntables (all below $1,000), and my LPs are from the sixties, 70s, 80s, and 90s. ...I got about 5,000 of them 12 inchers, and few hundred 45s.
I don't buy brand new LPs (the good remastered ones) any more like I did for so many years, and I read everything there is to read about, and check everyone who has an ultra high-end analog rig like Michael Fremer, Mike Lavigne, Gary Koh, Christian, and others; for the fascination and higher learning.
Once I was in contact with that German fellow who built his own highly sophisticated turntable and evaluated at $650,000!
And I kid you not! I got PMs to prove it, and pictures too, but the thing is this: I've been banned from that forum and cannot access those files (PMs) anymore.
Then in relation to this, that $4,000 record cleaning machine is small peanuts.
Mikey's turntable alone cost $160,000 and you can still get better sound from the best open-reel tape machines (the pro ones).
We're all audio people; I'm a non-pro musician myself, and a music lover since I was born almost 60 years ago!
The main forums I visit and register on the Internet are Audio (and Video too) forums.
Plus some scientific ones too (Philosophy and Planet Construction).
We have all type of people, just in audio forums, but all of us with the same common interest; our love for musical sounds.
For some of us it's the ultimate euphoria/ecstasy into the 5th dimensional audio nirvana, the holy grail of all papal liberation of the complete universe; the absolute inter-galactic trip.
For others it's a business, for another others it's a living.
For me it is a spiritual food, an hallucinatory experience. ...A vision into my sixth sense, an allegiance with the unknown.
...The undiscovered countries.
Yeah, I want the best too, I want my records real clean, I want the best experience, I want respect.