I don't know how people who grew up listening to good quality music (and perhaps playing it too) can suddenly forgo that for the rest of their lives.
If you went to enough shows your ears can't tell the difference anymore. Is the phone ringing?
I don't know how people who grew up listening to good quality music (and perhaps playing it too) can suddenly forgo that for the rest of their lives.
So, you folks who don't have a component system, you just listen to TV through ... the TV??
I find this really sad; aren't some of you at least former audiophiles? After all, this is a digital radio forum.
I have my surround sound receiver and multi speakers in my family room (with the TV), as pretty much everyone does. But in another room, I have a good ol' high-end component stereo - you know: amp, preamp, CD player, turntable, and (not mini) refrigerator-sized speakers. I listen to CDs and albums. I also have much of it in mp3 format for portable use.
I don't know how people who grew up listening to good quality music (and perhaps playing it too) can suddenly forgo that for the rest of their lives.
I find this really sad; aren't some of you at least former audiophiles? After all, this is a digital radio forum.
I have my surround sound receiver and multi speakers in my family room (with the TV), as pretty much everyone does. But in another room, I have a good ol' high-end component stereo - you know: amp, preamp, CD player, turntable, and (not mini) refrigerator-sized speakers. I listen to CDs and albums. I also have much of it in mp3 format for portable use.
I don't know how people who grew up listening to good quality music (and perhaps playing it too) can suddenly forgo that for the rest of their lives.
In order for you to hear music, it needs to be analog when it hits your ears, so speakers are analog. Amplification is also analog. So whether your source is a turntable, tape deck, tuner, CD, MP3 or HDMI, it's analog the rest of the way.We're digital...not analog????
In order for you to hear music, it needs to be analog when it hits your ears.
Not Meme. He can only receive digital input.![]()
Only once, and I was in college.
In order for you to hear music, it needs to be analog when it hits your ears, so speakers are analog. Amplification is also analog. So whether your source is a turntable, tape deck, tuner, CD, MP3 or HDMI, it's analog the rest of the way.





Yes, that's a photo by a well-known music photographer, of Chicago at Carnegie Hall. That recording was used for the Chicago IV album. I had the photo made into a tapestry. I had done something like this before, as a gift, so I was familiar with the process.that's where you have your Chicago mount
Well, it didn't go that smoothly at first. When it came time to solder the new speaker terminals to the wiring coming out of the cabinet, I wasn't really thinking things out. I needed a hand to hold the soldering iron, and a hand to feed-in the solder from the reel. That left no hands to hold the speaker. I tried to rest it partially in the hole in the cabinet, while still having access to the terminals. I got the first terminal soldered. But on the second terminal, the speaker fell out and dropped. I had done such a good job soldering, that the solder joint remained, but the terminal got ripped off the speaker.Nice bit of work Scotch.
Gotta love it when ya can pull something like that off.

