The Mathematical solution;
High End = (perceived sound - actual sound obtained) ^2 x Cost
(Depth of your pocket x -W.A.F)
Plain text solution;
What you
“think you are getting” minus what you
“really are getting” (as most audiophiles will usually believe they hear things that are not there, but because we believe we are listening to High End, they therefore must hear them) that’s the power of 2 (or should that be logarithmic depending on how much the product cost’s?) all over how much money you wish you could/would like to spend multiplied buy the handbrake, sorry I meant to say spouse, who is more often than not, negative to any further Audio/Video equipment entering the house.
Thus the result is, what ever you are comfortable affording and happy to live with, will be High End!
All jokes aside… my 15 year old son has a Yamaha RXV-440 powering some Tannoy FX 5.1 speakers, with a pioneer DVD player into a Sharp 16X9 CRT TV, with X-box plugged in, and all of his 15 year old friends think he has they coolest high end system…of anyone they know!
Just because a product requires a second mortgage, is not enough to justify something as high end. Most high end gear use parts from OEM/ODM manufactures and whilst they try to make improvements to the products, they do not necessarily succeed, case in point; The Lexicon RT-20 shares the same basic internals as the Pioneer Elite - DV-59AVi (best I can determine) and generally speaking, they both suffer similar strengths and weaknesses. However, the RT-20 costs $3500 whilst DV-59 cost $1600.
What then makes the Lexicon high end as I would not have said the DV-59 was “high end”? (Apologies to Lexicon and Pioneer as no malicious intent is implied)
For what its worth, if you spend more time listening and viewing rather than having to justify the cost of something as high end, you will increase your satisfaction with what ever you choose. That should be your reference to high end, not cost or marketing hype.
Cheers...
Dapper Dan...