> Just searched on your equipment list. Very impressive.
Thanks for that.
I have always been concerned about audio quality. As an aside, I hope the playlists I upload to the awesome CloudPlay service here convey what I hear on my vinyl to reflect that concern about audio quality.
Such is the issue with older analog.
Back when I was a teen, I opened up the back of the TV in my bedroom, and put an audio tap on the volume control. I fed that tap into the stereo system I had at the time. So, instead of listening to TV shows on a 3" speaker in the TV, I listened to it via the stereo I had at the time. A huge difference.
Fortunately, back then, I lived in the New York City television realm, so the stations I watched and listened to were full fidelity, not the reduced fidelity that the networks imposed upon their affiliates before satellite transmission came into being. New York City was a network origination point, so the shows were not subject to traveling over lower-quality means.
It wasn't until the mid- late-1980's when stereo audio for television emerged that the networks seemed to care about the audio quality they passed to to their affiliates.
Stereo in TV represented, imo, a major change. Instead of the low bandwidth feeds to affiliates over phone lines, the networks seemed to move to satellite feeds which gave a wider bandwidth for the audio. Stated subtly differently, if you lived outside of the New York City or Los Angeles network origination areas, you could now receive a much higher quality of audio.
Of course, then digital TV came along, and we're back to 162kps audio on the networks.