Not meaning to be offensive of course, just trying to provide a more personal perspective on what I think you are saying, which I think is misguided.
I mean, are you saying that there is never any benefit to upgrading espresso machines, even if you have the skills to work with them?
You are not understanding what I'm trying to say.
Because you mention the Ibanez (it is a perfect example of my opinion here) look what I said about it in post #4 from the acoustic thread here is a copy and past from then.
I'm getting a Seagull S6 in 2 months and I picked up an Ibanez for right now.
If I improve and am still playing in a year or 2 I might take another step up from the Seagull but for my skill level and ear the Seagull is a really good fit for me right now.
Of all the $400-$2,000 guitars I played I really like the Seagull the best (right now). I enjoyed playing it more than high end Martins, Taylors, Breedlove, and others. Undecided
And from post #6 same thread
"I should play the Ibanez for at least a year if not 2 :oand than take a close look at Takamine, Martin, and Seagull and decide at that point (the thinking that my playing and ear will be much farther along then and I can make a better decision on my main guitar."My position is congruent.
I am saying that my current skill level is not enough to exploit all of what the better guitars have to offer so I picked something that was a good match for now. If my skill level improves and I outgrow the Ibanez I said I want to "upgrade" to what I currently thought was the best the Seagull. I even said that it's what I think is best right now recognizing that in the future my improved skill might dictate something else.
See how that's much different than saying there is no reason to ever upgrade from the Ibanez?
Same with espresso machines.
If I would have canceled my vacation plans and picked up the Taylor it would not have made me play like James Taylor.
We can't spend our way to expert finger picking or god shots. I'm not trying to make the case that a Carezza is as good as...(well anything) or that the Ibanez is as good as a Martin..or that having better equipment is not preferential. Of course better machines are more desirable than lessor machines I think that is the misunderstanding here...
I'm just trying to put the machine itself like the guitar itself, or the drums proper perspective in the equation. If it's inferior/incapable then that is the end of it. But beyond that it is the tool portion nothing more.
So.... if the only variable your drummer changed was buying a drum set that cost 300% more how much better of a drummer would he be
that day?
300% ?
Obviously no.
If his skill was beyond the ability of his old set then he would improve up to the point of his maximum ability because the old set was inadequate and holding him back..
.but no further...and that is my point.
See what I'm sayin?
John F