
corysmith01
Senior Audioholic
Good point.
Except for the fact that many small grocery stores purchase from distributors with groups of 10 or 15 other smaller stores to get a good rate like Kroger and whatnot. Obviously, this doesn't apply to an Internet-Only company that has its own proprietary drivers.furrycute said:Very good point about volume. I guess the analogy would be a single owner grocery store, compared to a large chain store such as Kroger's. Kroger's is able to get much lower prices for the same products because of the large volume they purchase from distributors.
Why do you make so many rash generalizations and suspect assumptions? You haven't heard the SP3, you haven't heard the Ref.3s, and you clearly don't know much about how businesses actually operate. At least get some fisrt hand experience and basic facts.furrycute said:No, I have not heard the SP3. But I have heard cheap tube amps before. And I did not like what I heard.
Onix is the same company that markets Rockets line of speakers. And those speakers have been praised ad nauseum all over the net. I have heard the Rockets towers, and I did not like what I heard.
Onix tends to engage in "exaggerated" internet advertising, with their Rockets line of speakers, and I suspect with this tube amp as well.
You get what you pay for. You cannot get the sound of a pair of $6,000 speakers in a $600 package. And you cannot get the sound of a $6,000 tube amp in a $600 package. The workmanship cost is there, the materials cost is there, the manufacturing cost is there. For $600, you have to cut corners somewhere.
And please don't bring up this whole "internet direct sales" sales pitch again. Those internet direct companies have as much markup if not more compared to traditional B&M brands.
Sleestack said:Now, my opinion my be crap, but I stand by it.
Nex time, please make a visit to your friendly local hifi dealer.Rob Babcock said:but I've personally never wandered into one.![]()