Harleywood Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 When did you know you had an addiction to audio gear? I figured it out when getting settled into my first apartment in 1988 and I looked around at the bean bag chairs, the cardboard boxes for end and coffee tables and a $1400 two channel system in the corner. 4 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SWL Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 I don't have no problem..............but now that you mention it................I think I have a serious problem. Anybody got some tubes they wanna sell me?[emoji14]Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk 1 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Harleywood Posted November 21, 2018 Author Share Posted November 21, 2018 2 minutes ago, SWL said: I don't have no problem...... ........but now that you mention it....... .........I think I have a serious problem. Anybody got some tubes they wanna sell me? An addiction isn't always a problem unless of course the dealer is out of stock. 2 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rivernuggets Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 13 minutes ago, Harleywood said: I figured it out when getting settled into my first apartment in 1988 and I looked around at the bean bag chairs, the cardboard boxes for end and coffee tables and a $1400 two channel system in the corner. Nothing out of place here. ☺️ For me I started to realize when moving through the basement was getting difficult. 2 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wuzzzer Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 Mine was when my wife told me she'd no longer help me carry any speakers in or out of our house. It was that same day that I bought a two wheel dolly. 😂 From memory here are the Klipsch speakers that I used to own: KV-1 (my very first!) RF-25 RF-7 forte I forte II Quartet SC-1 RS-42 KG-4 SC-3 KV-4 SS-1 SB-3 (gave to my sister & bro in law) Chorus I (bought for $50, sold for $70) Pretty mixed bag! I think that covers them. 5 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RT FAN Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 I am not an audiophile. My reasoning is simple, I cannot afford to be an audiophile. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators dtel Posted November 21, 2018 Moderators Share Posted November 21, 2018 5 hours ago, Harleywood said: When did you know you had an addiction to audio gear? I like the "addiction to audio gear" much better than audiophile, it fits better. Probably around 1976, but I only keep what can be played, nothing (much) in storage. Only one set of speakers that you can't walk up to and turn on and it's the big yard speakers, I don't keep electronics under the patio since they rarely get used, I have to carry something out to play them. Not counting a pair of RB 75's I hold for our daughter since we gave here Forte's. My only problem is I ran out of room, and of course, there is always the money thing. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MEH Synergy Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 Mine was when my wife told me she'd no longer help me carry any speakers in or out of our house. It was that same day that I bought a two wheel dolly. 😂 Same story here. Thats hilarious I'm not the only one. Haha. I think my brother is sick of helping me too. 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RT FAN Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 7 minutes ago, Westcoastdrums said: Mine was when my wife told me she'd no longer help me carry any speakers in or out of our house. It was that same day that I bought a two wheel dolly. 😂 Same story here. Thats hilarious I'm not the only one. Haha. I think my brother is sick of helping me too. A handtruck doesn't complain too often. The dolly for wood floors, the hand truck for going over tile and gravel driveways. I actually had to change the tires on mine! 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris A Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 My first bed out of college was made up of eight tea crates (free for the asking from Lipton company at the Galveston docks) with a pad of foam rubber on top...for 5 years. In that time, I owned DIY 3-way acoustic suspension loudspeakers, and later gave them to a friend when I bought a pair of AR90s a year or so later with Pioneer receiver and direct drive TT with Shure V15 Type III cartridge. About 2 years later I sprang for a pair of Magnepan MG-IIIAs with Carver C-2 preamp and M1.5t amplifier. I was also a cat sailor/racer (NACRA 5.2, NACRA 5.5 18^2 metre, windsurfer) during that time and raced year 'round on the weekends on cats, then big boats (J24, 10-metre racing monohulls) on Galveston bay. I basically lived like a beach bum in Galveston (later Alvin, home of Nolan Ryan)--but with a very good sound system. I only accepted a donated bed from friends later--when they showed up at my door with a spare one that they had, thus having pity on my poor audiophile living state. It was like a page of my life turned when I laid down on the new bed that evening. I must've shed a little tear--knowing that life was going to change--forever. (I later married the girl that brought the bed.) That was 35 1/2 years ago. She's still here. Later, when our kids were almost out the door (i.e., graduated and with good jobs), I bought Jubilees. The rest you already know. The Magnepans are still in a box in the garage and the NACRA 5.5 is disassembled in the back yard (not having seen the water since I got married). I guess that I hang on the image of being an audiophile beach bum. Chris 7 1 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deang Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 Great post. I really enjoyed reading that one. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave A Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 I think it's when you tell your wife you are going to quit buying. Then you get rid of some stuff and find you still have an MCM 1900, a set of KP-450's still waiting to be picked up, three Altec A-7's in various condition to be fixed along with old KP201 and Heresy I sets, a set of 1989 KP250's and KP 301's, a set of KP 115 and 250's. Then you have that set of pristine Chorus I's and the set of Forte II's that need a bit of veneer work. In the next few weeks you are going to get a cabinet saw to make cabinets for a set of Super MWM's and a set of Chorus I's and a set of modified La Scalas because you have some parts sitting around because you bought four beat up La Scalas and only two are worth saving and a set of Chorus parts. Oh and that set of two KP-450 horns and that set of KP-456 horns on the top shelf you are getting woofers for so you can build bass bins after you get done with the pile o KPT-456's you are also buying in a few weeks. That is in between times when you are machining MAHL horn lenses. It is however not an addiction it is a fascination with audio. Right????? 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Krispy Kirk Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 Leaving home for college in the fall of 1983, I just knew deep in my bones that the only way to get my own stereo was to get a job - my first real punch-the-clock job, at minimum wage no less. Which, back then, was a whopping $3.35 an hour. I slaved in the cafeteria in my college dorm for an entire semester until I had enough to buy a basic dorm room system (Technics receiver, Panasonic cassette deck, and big honkin' disco-approved Fisher rack-grade "white woofer" speakers). As I moved through college and my budding audiophilia, several things happened: I ditched cassettes for vinyl, I ditched those Fishers for a sweet pair of ADS L570s, I ditched a series of cheap *** receivers for some genuine audiophile-approved Adcom separates, and <drum roll please> the Compact Disc arrived. I just had to have it. Who paid for all of this? Why YOU did taxpayers! All through the 80s I cashed my student loan and Pell Grant checks every few months not to pay my tuition. Hell no. All that dough - thousands and thousands of dollars of it - bought me ever greater stereos. Until I finally dropped out and enlisted in the military. And then the cycle started all over again (ever heard of an "AAFES stereo"?). Yep, that was me: slave to the sound. I can honestly say that for a decade from the early 80s to the early 90s (when I bought my first Klipsch) all of my expendable income went towards stereo gear and tapes/records/CDs. I slept on the floor, ate ramen, mooched off the girlfriend, yada yada. But the tunes were always cranking. And usually at a relatively high level of quality. Top that you amateurs. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MEH Synergy Posted November 21, 2018 Share Posted November 21, 2018 2005 when was I bought my first REAL stereo at 18. Got me pair of Klipsch RF7 and rsw 15 sub in black veneer natrually. Got me 70% off through klipsch directz once a year. Pair it with B&K 200.2 amp and ref 5 S2 preamp..... Still miss that system occasionally.... Very very capable system. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Schu Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 Denial is NOT only a river in Egypt... 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ivanhoe56 Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 18 hours ago, Chris A said: My first bed out of college was made up of eight tea crates (free for the asking from Lipton company at the Galveston docks) with a pad of foam rubber on top...for 5 years. In that time, I owned DIY 3-way acoustic suspension loudspeakers, and later gave them to a friend when I bought a pair of AR90s a year or so later with Pioneer receiver and direct drive TT with Shure V15 Type III cartridge. About 2 years later I sprang for a pair of Magnepan MG-IIIAs with Carver C-2 preamp and M1.5t amplifier. I was also a cat sailor/racer (NACRA 5.2, NACRA 5.5 18^2 metre, windsurfer) during that time and raced year 'round on the weekends on cats, then big boats (J24, 10-metre racing monohulls) on Galveston bay. I basically lived like a beach bum in Galveston (later Alvin, home of Nolan Ryan)--but with a very good sound system. I only accepted a donated bed from friends later--when they showed up at my door with a spare one that they had, thus having pity on my poor audiophile living state. It was like a page of my life turned when I laid down on the new bed that evening. I must've shed a little tear--knowing that life was going to change--forever. (I later married the girl that brought the bed.) That was 35 1/2 years ago. She's still here. Later, when our kids were almost out the door (i.e., graduated and with good jobs), I bought Jubilees. The rest you already know. The Magnepans are still in a box in the garage and the NACRA 5.5 is disassembled in the back yard (not having seen the water since I got married). I guess that I hang on the image of being an audiophile beach bum. Chris Great post Chris , very simple but elegantly told story . As a confession I did not realize I had an audio gear addiction problem until I became infected by another addict via Audiophile Osmosis while listening to their audio set-up . Danley Labs SH 50 Speakers 4 ohms First Watt SIT-2 Amplifier 8 watts into 4 ohms Pass Labs XP-30 Pre-amplifier Line level McIntosh MR-71 (Tube) FM-Tuner Vintage ( Restored ) Rel Stadium III Sub woofers ( Pair ) 1 per channel APL NWO-Master Universal Transport/DAC ( Esoteric UX-1Pi ) CD Transport and outboard Tube DAC 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Schu Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 The search for truth is an addiction? I never really thought about it in those terms... in that way, I am proud to be addicted. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris A Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 1 hour ago, Ivanhoe56 said: ...As a confession I did not realize I had an audio gear addiction problem until I became infected by another addict via Audiophile Osmosis while listening to their audio set-up . This certainly was a factor in my "audio poor" living style when actually working for a living. My best buddy in college (yes, you guessed it--an EE major) built his own DIY 3-ways and did a really good job, even though he had no SPL meter or acoustic measurement system at his disposal. It was after all 1976 summer break. He was a bit on the "meticulous" side (read: OCD) about his setup. I just showed up at his dorm room to vegetate/study. I found that engineering school kind of loads your rear end down...at least it did back then before Matlab and desktop PCs...so good tunes were actually a requirement for this easily distracted student. "Synergistic" is the word that I'd use. Chris 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rivernuggets Posted November 23, 2018 Share Posted November 23, 2018 On 11/21/2018 at 2:40 PM, Chris A said: In that time, I owned DIY 3-way acoustic suspension loudspeakers, and later gave them to a friend when I bought a pair of AR90s a year or so later.... There's a pair of AR90s for sale in Milwaukee. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marvel Posted November 23, 2018 Share Posted November 23, 2018 On 11/21/2018 at 3:16 PM, dtel said: I don't keep electronics under the patio since they rarely get used... I thought that is where the bodies are buried... 🙄 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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