GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Editorial" Archives

May 1, 2007

 

New Lows for Entry-Level Hi-Fi

I bought my first audio system when I was 17. It cost me $1200. That was in 1981, and my inflation calculator tells me that today that system would cost more than $2800. Obviously, that was a lot of money for a kid to blow on a stereo, and you’d think that teens would have an even harder time buying an equivalent system today -- after all, wages haven’t increased at the same rate as consumer goods. But in fact, the opposite is true -- today, good-quality, entry-level equipment is far more affordable than it was 25 years ago.

For as long as I’ve been an audiophile, it hasn’t been inflation that has applied to entry-level hi-fi, but deflation. I can buy a much better system today for $1200 than the one I had in 1981. Furthermore, whereas $1200 seemed to be a price point to entry to decent gear back then (I bought an NAD integrated amp, two-way bookshelf PSB speakers, and a B&O turntable), today the amount you need to spend for a good starter system is far, far lower. In fact, depending on how you mix’n’match your components, it might be as low as $600 -- even in today’s much cheaper dollars.

For example, this month we review the Trends Audio TA-10.1 integrated amplifier ($129.95 USD) and the Oppo DV-970HD "universal" player ($149). Combine those components with Athena Technologies’ AS-B1.2 speakers ($180/pair), which I mentioned in March in "What We’d Buy: Speakers Under $300," throw in another $150 for stands and cables, and for just over $600 you’d have a pretty decent setup comprising nothing but GoodSound! Great Buy! gear. Furthermore, this combo would more than likely sound quite a bit better than the system I bought in 1981.

Granted, the Trends TA-10.1 delivers only 10Wpc into 8 ohms (or 15Wpc into 4 ohms), so you won’t be able to play it very loud; and it has only one set of inputs, so you’ll be pretty limited as to what you can hook up to it -- but it’s at least enough to get you started. Besides, no one says you have to stick with the same components forever. I used that system I bought in 1981 for about six years, and upgraded when I started to earn more money.

So can you. For example, in time you can consider switching to a more powerful and feature-rich integrated amp -- something like NAD’s C325BEE ($399), which we’ll review soon. At the same time, you can look at the option of adding a subwoofer to extend the lows -- Athena makes some great, inexpensive subs, as do many other companies. And even if you buy both, you still won’t be paying as much as I did for my original system more than 25 years ago.

The thing to remember is that, unlike food and cars and houses, the price of great entry-level audio equipment hasn’t gotten more expensive -- it’s only gotten cheaper as the gear itself has gotten better. Don’t you wish everything worked that way?

…Doug Schneider

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