Bollux HiFi
Posted by: redeye on 18 March 2002
We all have a demon or two kicking around...
Whats the nastiest piece of kit you've ever bought and tried to justify afterwards..
Mine.. Plinius 8150 integrated pile of shit amplifier. Proudly made in NZ and much loved by Americans...
Nuff said really
Peter
Not that I didn't like them, but I soon realised they were going in a different direction to where I wanted to go with my music...
TC '..'
"Girl, you thought he was a man, but he was a Muffin..."
Took ages to assemble the whole arrangement and the next day my cleaning lady lifted the player to dust (I had no idea she did this) and spent the next few hours trying to rebuild it all, embedding the sharp spikes in my nice quadraspire top in the process.
Never got to hear what difference they made!
The cleaning lady is recovering but sadly crippled for life
Bruce
[This message was edited by Bruce Woodhouse on MONDAY 18 March 2002 at 10:22.]
I had the audacity to show off about it to someone in the pub I later discovered owned naim, in his defence he sounded very enthusiastic for me.
This was before naim though of course.
My one and only mistake was buying some Bose speakers which were about the size of a Rubick cube.
Bloody awful.
Regards
Mick
We must all try to forgive ourselves
JohanR
Bob
Nic P
Alex S
Actually, what bothers me most is the fact that these are still made.
The only piece of equipment that I returned in short order was a pair of Linn Kans circa 1982- they just sounded horrible when plugged into my A&R A60E- this integrated amp had a rolled off bass with rounded bass transients which worked fine for big flabby speakers, but was a dose of hemlock to Kans.
Ron
Dum spiro audio
Dum audio vivo
Ron
Dum spiro audio
Dum audio vivo
It was between this and a NAD ???? - Can't for the life of me remember. I chose the Nak cause it balanced better with the amp I had at the time
( Harmon/Kardon PM640i ). The NAD seemed too soft, warm and fuzzy. When I upgraded to the Nait 1, the Nak was so bright, bass shy and forward that it was almost unlistenable with 90% of recordings. In this case the NAD would've been better. Oh well, live an learn.
I still have it, boxed somewhere, It now likes to eat disks when warm, but when cold, has a nasty buzz but forgoes the eating.
michael
Sold the vtl and used the cash to buy a NAP140, which I still use, traded in the SL600's for Epos ES14's and I was happy at last.
Plinius II & Plinius III pre and power amp. The preamp ran off of the Poweramp a-la naim, although separate signal interconnects were used, and poser was carried on a regular 180 degree 5-pin DIN. Ok, not the last word in music, or even in hiFi - but bought for a reason, and provided plenty of 100wpc action for a young penniless apprentice... the preceding Kenwood KA5700 integrated amp kept topping out the power meters as the PSU ran out of drive when playing Shriekback at large, large SPL's... and I picked up the Plinius as best value for my strapped wallet (NZD700 used at the time, IIRC)... this amp was so bad I couldn't even detect major improvement when finally adding the Plinius IV pre-amp PSU some years later! Finally sold off to a friend in the same position some years later - after exchanging my trusty B&W DM220 speakers (veterans of many, many parties and even rewired with (shudder) Monster Powerline 3, for some fairly decent Arcam 2's and a MF A1-X.
So there - the skeletons are out of the closet. I think the Yamaha belt-drive semi-auto turntable - B-300? (my first hifi purchase) was excusable, as I was too young to know any better. It served well until the Thorens TD125 turned up.
Rico - SM/Mullet Audio
Audioquest Isobearing I replaced the feet of my Rega P3 with these. Wow, increased blackness and deeper bass. I missed out on a lot of music in the mid-90s.
Rega Sooper Bias My first foray into vinyl. This cart was the cause of my "vinyl is crap" phase. It was so bad, it must have been waay off-spec.
I want to add the YBA Integrated, but at the time, I loved its idiosyncratic laid back, hi-fi spectacular noise. At least I can bite my thumb at round-earthers without ignorance or hypocrisy.
Some Meridian amps (s/h) - the original thin thingies - cant remember what they were called but a 12S/160 completely demolished them, such that they were a joke.
Mission 770s (new) - just not very nice to listen to (the Saras replaced those; frying pan...fire).
The original Systemdek (new) - Not bad but couldnt get used to the fact that it wasnt an LP12. Sold it soon after to get an LP12, which I shouldve done right from the start.
Syrinx PU2 - sounded good; built like utter crap -smashed up a Decca London with it when I was pissed (you think an ARO is unstable?!).
Steve
Man, if Linn Saras and a Systemdek were among "the nastiest pieces of kit" you ever bought you ought to consider going into the business.
If I'd been this well informed (or lucky), I'd be a few years closer to retirement with the savings.
A couple of things:
1. Fear not, you'll get there in the end and the incremental improvements are part of what make owning Naim such a pleasure; and there are always eager takers for what you're leaving behind.
(Yep, CDS2 first IMO)
2. I'm mad and can safely be ignored, especially with regard to the 82.
Alex
The sound did not as good as mention in What HiFi
Moppy