It’s the time of year for saving money!
So, it happens. You didn’t really see it coming, but you got fired from your job. Your nest egg isn’t what you really needed it to be and your cashflow is flowing in the wrong direction. Like any self-respecting audiophile, your music playback system is one of your biggest assets, and sadly selling it off on Audiogon.com or eBay.com is the quickest way out of your pending financial doom. So, you pull the trigger. Photos get taken. Ads get posted. Gear gets boxed and your dream system only really exists when your eyes close and your head hits the pillow. You have liquidated, but you are safe from monetary disaster for now and will be re-employed soon. And once you have an income again, you even have a few grand left to start over. What the hell would you buy with your old champagne tastes but a new beer budget?
The $1,000 Barebones System
If I was trying to put together a truly barebones system on a budget of less than $1,000, there would be some seriously tough decisions to be made. Vinyl is out for me. Yes, you can buy a cheap turntable for $200, but if you want the novelty of vinyl, I’d still hold off until I got a few new paychecks under my belt and focus on the meat and potatoes first. Source components would likely be in the iPad, Roku range. If you are spinning silver discs (they aren’t worth much on the used market) then perhaps an Ultra HD Blu-ray player that supports some legacy HD formats (most don’t do all in a post-Oppo world). Perhaps you can find a pre-UHD Oppo player used on the cheap? An iPad with the Tidal app is an incredible source component. You might also need a nice external hard drive for your music storage, which these days can be sub-$100.
For electronics, you need to be looking at an integrated amp and not a very pricey one. PS Audio’s Sprout might make the budget. For affordable speakers, bigger might be better in terms of covering more octaves of music, but entry-level bookshelf speakers from any number of audiophile players may be more fiscally sensible (think: Paradigm, Definitive Technology, Polk, MartinLogan, Monitor Audio, GoldenEar, Aperion, ELAC, SVS, and many others). If theres left-over budget, something like an RSL Speedwoofer 10 for $379 could really add some impact to your new system without blowing the budget to the next level right out of the gate.
Another system configuration twist could be to buy something like an MQA-capable AudioQuest Dragonfly Red DAC ($199) and use it with some powered speakers. There are any number of great sounding, affordable powered speakers in the market today–many which can be found on Amazon.com. Our staff that went to CEDIA raved about GoldenEar’s prototype powered speakers. They also spoke kindly of ELACs more affordable but great sounding powered speakers, which also easily pair with a small form factor ELAC subwoofer for a system like this. Some ripped music, a bit of Tidal streaming, and you are back in the game without effecting your FICO score.
The $2,500 Budget System
In the $2,500 range, I still like the powered speaker option, specifically something like theKEF LS50 wireless system. What I like about it is not just the sound and the price ($1,299ish) but the fact that it’s a Roon endpoint, meaning you can use an iPad or something similar to control your music (plus Tidal, plus Spotify) with the slickest of interfaces. The LS50 wireless also has an LFE output, so you can easily add a sub to the mix to increase the impact of your system. Something from SVS’ 1000 series ($499) might eke into the budget with a little room to spare.
By all means, you could start looking at more audiophile grade electronics, which are becoming more affordable every year. Today’s modern AV receivers can be pretty good if just used for two-channel listening, and they come with room correction and can be augmented with an aftermarket amp if you ever need more power. A Marantz receiver with a Monoprice stereo amp could be the heart of a creative two-channel setup that also manages modern HDMI sources if you want to integrate a video display. You get Alexa integration and other goodies too. At this level, you can start looking at bigger, better speakers from the same group of players as mentioned before, as well as a number of other, more exotic brands that a slightly larger budget would allow. Heck, why not go ahead and add a decent display to the mix? TCL makes a super-cheap Roku TV that’s under $700 for 55 inches.
The Used Debate
If you want to flip this discussion on its head, you extend the bang of your buck quite handily by buying pre-loved gear. Warranties will be hard to come by, but if you play your cards right, you can find some bigger, better products for your newly diminished audiophile budget. Heck, you sold your gear used so of course you can buy it back at a lower price, if you felt compelled. You likely will sacrifice the latest in DAC technology, room correction, and a lot of the advances that come with today’s pretty awesome, sub-$1,000 setups, but you likely can get more blue-chip products, more power, and so on.
So, let me bounce the question to you. God forbid you had a financial hiccup: what would you buy if you had to really strip down your audiophile system? Where are the best values? Used or new? Online or brick-and-mortar retailer? Cook us up your coolest system or system options below in the comments. We look forward to hearing from you.
Truly great article
I understand it perfectly.
When I left the industry some years ago and sort of reset my whole life I went through much of what you’re describing. My solution was to go used AND powered. I invested in secondhand Bang & Olufsen products, which, to me, still sound fantastic, look positively high-end, and on the second hand market trade for pennies on the dollar. Plus, with them being powered, I saved on ancillary equipment.
In truth, I plugged a pair of BeoLab 6000s directly into my 65″ UltraHD display’s analog audio outputs and used them as TV speakers in lieu of a soundbar. Couple that with the fact that I could Google Cast music from my phone directly through to the TV (it had Chromecast built-in) and I had the simplest, two-channel home theater and listening system I had ever put together.
I lived with it for nearly 4 years with ZERO interest in upgrading or changing for I became addicted to the simplicity. Oh and it sounded shockingly good. I added a turntable (another B&O product) a few years into my experiment which meant I needed a preamp. I bought a used two channel preamp with an HT passthrough and BOOM, I had vinyl AND my two channel home theater.
While I have since returned to the realm of dedicated, non-powered components, I still have my B&O gear in another room and utilize it still.
Andrew, I enjoyed reading your articles, visiting your website. I was a little sad to see you stop, or seemed to stop posting / reviewing. Guess it’s been awhile since I’ve been back to this website. Good to know you’re still around.
Still looking for a copy of April Showers.
If things were really that bad, I would probably go for a Schiit DAC/amp combo, spend as much as I could afford on decent headphones and stream from whatever device I could. All while retaining just enough money to continue to support the crack cocaine habit that cost me job in the first place. Thus would begin my slow, agonizing slide towards an untimely demise. Something like that anyway.
At those levels, I would def. go used.
$1000 system – $300 Portable headphone amplifier/USB DAC/ $700 for wireless BT headphones.
$2500 system – $900 Integrated Amp w/BT / $1600 speakers
Either system would allow streaming from my phone.
considering that almost all of my present “dream system” has been purchased used, there’s no reason why a barebones system wouldn’t also be that way. but i also have enough excess gear bought on the cheap that i wouldn’t be stuck w/o a decent system, even if i had to part w/the prized pieces…
basics would include my grace internet tuner, modded art di/o dacs, (yes – two; one for the grace, the other for the cd transport), sherwood s3000v & nikko gamma 1 fm tuners, empire turntable, yamaha yst sw305 subs, cosmetically challenged meret re speakers, audio alchemy cd transport, two homebrew amps – one a gainclone for the main speakers, the other a 100wpc stereo class d amp, audio alchemy dlc preamp & z-man tube buffer, marchand xm6 x-over. i doubt i could get enough cash for my pentagon ps3 fono stage to make it worthwhile selling it; if i could, i’d use the fono stage built into an old adcom gfp1a, or an old electrocompaniet ec-1a that’s been cosmetically challenged. if th ec-1a could be made to function completely – its damage is more than cosmetic – i might forego the audio alchemy preamp and ust hte ec, along w/a diyparadise ldr remote passive preamp.
yes, this sounds like a lot of stuff, and it is. but i think i spent ~$3.5k max for all of it when i got the stuff, and that includes the meret’s and the electrocompaniet preamp before the angry ex threw them done the stairs into the basement. (along w/a few other sundry assorted things…)
ymmv,
doug s.
ps – the kef ls50’s that retail for ~$1300 are the passive iterations; add ~$800 for the actives…
For me the speakers would be the Vanatoo Transparent One, scrounge a used Logitech Squeezebox Touch and have roughly $450 left to get a more-than-budget HSU or SVS sub.
Excellent choice if you primarily do near-field listening…