Thank you for your suggestions, they are most welcome.
Now I have another question, please do not take this wrong way, but it is kind of funny to me that most of you seem to have more elaborate setups and have been steering me towards a simpler ones.
Does that mean that the extra amps, better DACs and other features really do not make a difference in the sound? Or you just want me to enjoy the upgraditis bug for a longer time?
In my case, in my home theater system, I have speakers that retail for about $6500, with a receiver that retails for $1700. I only use a separate power amp for the subwoofers because they are unpowered (i.e., they do not have a built-in amplifier, so one must use a separate power amp with them). I use my receiver's amplification for my speakers. I previously had a receiver that retailed for $600 with these same speakers. Unless I engage a feature that affects the sound, it sounds the same as before, even though I now have about twice as much power. I bought the newer receiver for its features, not for its extra power. Now, if my speakers were very inefficient or extremely difficult to drive, then I would use power amps. But they are not, so I do not waste my money on amplifiers I don't need.
It would be stupid for me to have spent the money on more amplification with lesser speakers, for the same total outlay of money, because it would not sound as good that way.
If you wish to waste money on power amps you don't need, that is your choice. But you would be better off putting your money into your speakers where it will actually affect the sound.
And you are right, that some people have found out the expensive way that they did not need extra amplifiers, as they added them, and after the effect of the newness of the new toys wore off on them, they came to realize that it did not help the sound. You can learn that way, or, like so many others, you might be convinced by the
placebo effect that your new thing makes a difference when it really doesn't.
According to Definitive Technology, you can get by with as little as 20 watts with your main speakers (which power their own subwoofers anyway). Of course, if you listen to them very loud, you may want more power, but your receiver already has more power. With your speakers in any normal room, the only way you need a lot of power is if you listen at sound levels that will damage your hearing. That would be foolish, but many people do that, and you can buy the equipment for that purpose if you wish.
At the end of the day, it is your money, and you can spend it however you like, regardless of whether it will make an actual improvement in the sound or not.