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Old 10-16-2023, 04:07 PM   #3
Hack&Lube
Atomic Nerd
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Calgary
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Since1984 View Post
Thought I would throw up an all encompassing thread on some of our HiFi setups. I am in the midst of upgrading and am currently running the following:

Amplifier:
Naim Nait 5si

Mains:
Kef LS50 Meta

Phono Pre-Amp:
Rega Fono Mini A2D MK2

Turntable:
Audio Technica AP-LT120X

Streamer:
None


So my next purchase will be a network streamer....which is where I am stuck. I think the Bluesound Node would be plenty for my somewhat entry level system. However, I have thought about the Cambridge Audio CXN 2....or I just say #### it and buy the Naim ND5 XS 2 to match my amp.

After that, I will be upgrading my turntable to a Rega P3.


Let's hear your thoughts and see what everyone has for a setup!
I started with the Audio Technica AP-LT120 back in the day. I discovered the anti-skating was fake and didn't work. I haven't followed AT since and don't know if the LT120X has improved this. Biggest symptom was tonearm drift when tracking a smooth record and jumping inward toward the first track and hugging the inner walls instead of being centered in the groove. Rega P3 should be a nice upgrade but the biggest upgrade you can make is in the cartridge. Platter material and all these other things are mostly myths just like tone wood in guitars.

Modern turntables are works of art but I've seen some vintage ones with full electro-mechanical auto-return or repeat functions and it's a fantastic convenience if you want to leave a record on while you are doing chores, etc.

For network streamer, make the investment if you have high-quality digital audio but digital is digital. A cheap Bluetooth 5.0+ device will be exactly the same as a very expensive appliance with marketing fluff. Most of my digital content is compressed Spotify Free or Youtube streams so I can't tell a difference.

Your modern speakers are a lot better than most vintage ones but that might be because of age in dried up cones and foam. My general theory on hifi audio is that vintage is a great bang for your buck for features and performance if you are listening to line-level 2.0 audio. Modern stuff is better if there is some kind of audio modelling or AI enhancement technology in place but you can get most of this from software. The rest is just a lot of marketing just as has always existed in the audiophile arena.

Last edited by Hack&Lube; 10-16-2023 at 04:37 PM.
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