Thank You.1890s: "made in Germany" is seen as cheap stuff, possibly copied from English manufacturers
1950s: "made in Japan" is seen as cheap, mass produced garbage, often badly copied from western products
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Thank You.1890s: "made in Germany" is seen as cheap stuff, possibly copied from English manufacturers
1950s: "made in Japan" is seen as cheap, mass produced garbage, often badly copied from western products
Now with vintage audio like Pioneer and such people see made in Japan as a huge plus. My local vintage dealer raves about the craftsmanship of vintage Japanese receivers.1890s: "made in Germany" is seen as cheap stuff, possibly copied from English manufacturers
1950s: "made in Japan" is seen as cheap, mass produced garbage, often badly copied from western products
If you look at traditional Chinese crafts like calligraphy and pottery they are amazing. I worked for a Chinese company for a couple of years and learned much about the way they do business. They have a completely different way of looking at things than we do. Their perspective and many different customs leads to racially different business ethics. It is really something to do business with them on a daily basis. If I had to sum it all up I would say that winning, being successful, and amassing wealth are prized above everything. They have an immense work ethic and dedication. I don't think most Westerners understand that the Chinese are capable of making superbly crafted products when called upon to do so. It is wrong to think they make only cheap shoddy products, and they take considerable pride in their better efforts. They also have great appreciation of high quality products from the West. If the West can't measure up to them we will all be buying Chinese audio equipment soon enough. Incidentally, here in the West we appropriated many Chinese innovations in pottery, namely in 17th century Germany. Now is is just roles reversed.
Now with vintage audio like Pioneer and such people see made in Japan as a huge plus. My local vintage dealer raves about the craftsmanship of vintage Japanese receivers.
Actually they really do measure the accuracy of elite movements but the whole chronometer thing is meaningless. But you are right that Casios and Timex models outperform mechanical watches, even good ones. This is especially so with chronographs. But the craftsmanship is amazing and we see such handmade products very rarely now.
If you look at traditional Chinese crafts like calligraphy and pottery they are amazing. I worked for a Chinese company for a couple of years and learned much about the way they do business. They have a completely different way of looking at things than we do. Their perspective and many different customs leads to racially different business ethics. It is really something to do business with them on a daily basis. If I had to sum it all up I would say that winning, being successful, and amassing wealth are prized above everything. They have an immense work ethic and dedication. I don't think most Westerners understand that the Chinese are capable of making superbly crafted products when called upon to do so. It is wrong to think they make only cheap shoddy products, and they take considerable pride in their better efforts. They also have great appreciation of high quality products from the West. If the West can't measure up to them we will all be buying Chinese audio equipment soon enough. Incidentally, here in the West we appropriated many Chinese innovations in pottery, namely in 17th century Germany. Now is is just roles reversed.
People collect watches like anything else. How the wealthy spend their money is their prerogative. I knew a fellow who collected duck decoys.What people seem to be missing is the watch thing - and MAYBE the Crazy Rich Audio (could be a spin off movie?) thing are jewelry. Its supposed to appeal to the emotions - not the analytical side of life.....
It'd be a lot easier to stomach if a gazillion people weren't homeless and / or starving whle someone is plunking down 80 grand for a watch or 500 million for a boat
As a birder - Yeah for duck decoys! Not the hunting use mind you, just the art and representation of the birds. I'd totally collect those.People collect watches like anything else. How the wealthy spend their money is their prerogative. I knew a fellow who collected duck decoys.
This one is $75 at amazon:I know of some people who collected ecosystems.
And to many "rich guy" audiophiles, their audio equipment also serves as a status emblem. Beautiful speaker cabinets have their own aesthetic appreciation, just like watches.
Was it actually olive green or that wierd bronze/orange colour that faded really badly in direct sunlight?
This was their statement amplifier and preamplifier. Hand built to order. Links below.
View attachment 139654
This gives you an idea of how big the amplifier actually was:
View attachment 139655
https://audio-database.com/TechnicsPanasonic/amp/se-a1-e.html
https://audio-database.com/TechnicsPanasonic/amp/su-a2-e.html
I payed with an SL-P50P prototype for a bit. That was something.
I agree with a much earlier post from @amirm , that we should probably retire the 'chi-fi' usage due to it's negative connotation, which is undeserved today.I greatly respect the technical expertise and business savvy of Chi-fi companies like Topping, Gustard et al. But they appear by and large to have studied customer service from cable TV and cell phone companies.
Except perhaps for Topping, I see myself as being about as likely to spend more than $300 or so on Chi-fi as to go to Jiffy Lube for an appendectomy.
It seemed a convenient shorthand, and I certainly intended no deprecation in using it. But I'll accede to the wishes of AmirM.I agree with a much earlier post from @amirm , that we should probably retire the 'chi-fi' usage due to it's negative connotation, which is undeserved today.
Similar to 'jap junk,' widely used stateside in the 1950's and 60's.