Finally, the Wharfedales sound great!

Almost five years ago, I bought a set of big (nearly five foot tall) Wharfedale speakers. From the beginning, I knew that these speakers needed a good amplifier, and I thought we’d been sold a good one – but they’ve really never sounded like I imagined they would.
A year ago we visited Crowne Audio and got some guidance for setting up our new home – use a smaller room, and get a better amplifier for the speakers. We did set up a smaller room for music; and finally now I’ve spent a crazy amount of money on a new setup with a high end Yamaha receiver, and a separate McIntosh amplifier that has the sole job of driving the Wharfedales! I had to get the new shelf unit because the McIntosh amplifier is huge and heavy, so the room looks a little more empty now – but the shelves look good especially with the equipment on them:

Arguably I could have kept the old receiver and just added the amplifier – but the old NAD unit had lots of trouble with HDMI syncing (I’d have to turn everything on ten minutes before I wanted to view anything), so the new Yamaha receiver replaced it. Configuration and features of the Yamaha are much better too, even including an iPad App! It’s rather overkill since it’s only being used to select the source and drive the rear speakers, but anyway …

The McIntosh amplifier itself is the star of this new install of course! This MC452 unit has huge power to fully drive the two Wharfedale speakers:

 

Clearly there’s no way to convey the sound improvements, but suffice to say I’m thrilled with the results! I had to use an old subwoofer to get anything like reasonable music quality before, it always seemed like it should not be necessary and today during setup it blew out – but it’s proved my point that there’s no need for it, if the amplifier can fully drive the speakers.

Thanks to Crowne Audio for getting everything set up for me, and special thanks to Margaret for letting me buy such a crazy thing 🙂

Heron update

A quick picture from earlier today of the Heron nest. Note the adult in the tree to the left; I’m not sure but I think the two in the nest are young, judging by their “fluffy” head – if so, then the adults are doing a good job this year, bringing both young to fledge:

Amazon.com through the years

Many April Fool posts today, including that Amazon.com has created a “retro” home page:

It looks surprisingly usable, but sadly it doesn’t actually function as it’s just an image that clears when clicked. But it did prompt me to wonder if I was using Amazon.com that long ago – the answer surprisingly is “yes”! My first Amazon purchase was in May 1998, a technical book which presumably I could never have found at Barnes & Noble.
I found it interesting then to look my evolving purchase history over the years. I used to buy quite a lot of books from Amazon but that tailed off and then stopped in 2010 (not a coincidence surely that the iPad killed the book for me!)
I didn’t buy my first music CD till 2000, and I used to buy quite a lot – Amazon is great for getting hold of unusual music, or stuff only available in England. That’s even more true for videos; I bought my first DVD in 2000 too, and still today buy an occasional one (again, if it exists only in DVD format or is completely unavailable in the US market – my DVD player has no trouble with English format DVDs).

My first non-media purchase was in 2004 (soap!) but since 2011 those items are the most common purchases; I get quite a lot of clothing, wash/shave products and car care stuff from Amazon now. It’s also pretty clear when I got my Amazon Prime account, with Amazon spending jumping by a factor of five!

I don’t know about you, but I find these insights into “old” behaviors to be fascinating (like my previous Shazam post) …