Vinyl can be very frustrating due to the inconsistency of the medium itself and the quality of the mastering. I guess Tom Port of Better Records has a business model built on this premise. Having review sites and sites such as WBF helps to some extent. With a great LP, vinyl can sound amazing. The difficulty is in finding a great LP. As my system gets better, I find faults and deficiencies in more and more of the modern reissue LPs. With second hand LPs, at least they are cheap, but buying multiple versions of a favorite recording on reissue labels can get expensive. While a lot of music on streaming is also not well mastered, at least no money is wasted. In general, I have more luck with the master tape copies that I got from several reliable sources. I would say about 80% of my tape copies perform to my liking. As for LPs, the percentage is only about 15%, and I end up just playing the few dozen titles. To be fair, most of my LPs are original releases I bought during the late 70s and throughout the 80s, but many of these (mostly classical) were actually released in the 1960s since I bought mostly second hand when I was a student. I am going to investigate whether 4 tract 7.5 ips R2R is a more reliable analogue source, and I am still waiting for my 4 track Revox to arrive.