You chose each component for a reason. Every cable, every connection, every setting matters. HomeRunbook gives your audio system the documentation it deserves — a complete, visual map of your signal chain from source to speaker.
Every component you've carefully selected deserves to be properly documented. HomeRunbook captures the full picture — from source to speaker, from settings to serial numbers.
Document every link from source to speaker: turntable to phono preamp, DAC to integrated amp, amplifier to binding posts. The complete audio path, visualized.
Model numbers, serial numbers, purchase dates, warranty status, and current value. Every piece of gear tracked for insurance, resale, and maintenance.
Document panel positions, bass trap placements, and diffuser locations in your listening room. When you move or rearrange, you can reproduce the setup exactly.
Map which sources feed which rooms, what amplification each zone uses, and how your distributed audio system routes signal through the house.
"What's the signal path from my turntable to the living room speakers?" The AI understands your topology and gives precise, system-specific answers.
High-end audio equipment represents a serious investment. HomeRunbook provides detailed records with photos, receipts, and serial numbers for insurance claims.
HomeRunbook captures the full signal path with the level of detail audiophiles care about. Cartridge output levels, phono stage gain settings, amplifier input assignments, speaker wire gauge and length, binding post types.
When you need to remember which input on the Hegel the phono preamp connects to, or what gain setting the Mani is on, it's all there. Documented once, accessible always.
Start DocumentingFrom a dedicated two-channel listening room to whole-house distributed audio, HomeRunbook maps how each zone is configured. See which sources can play where, what amplification powers each room, and how everything connects.
The listening room on a dedicated 20-amp circuit. The living room sharing power with kitchen outlets. The office headphone setup on the network VLAN for streaming. All documented, all connected, all in one place.
See All FeaturesAudiophile equipment isn't cheap. HomeRunbook tracks every piece of gear with serial numbers, purchase dates, receipt photos, and warranty information. When you need to file an insurance claim, sell a component, or check a warranty, everything is in one place.
Attach photos of each component, store digital receipts, and maintain an always-current inventory. Your collection is worth documenting properly.
Start Your InventoryYou've been reading about the Denafrips Ares 12th and you're ready to upgrade from your current DAC. Here's how HomeRunbook makes the swap smooth.
Open HomeRunbook and view your signal chain. You see your current Wiim Pro Plus connected via coax digital to the amplifier's DAC input. The streamer sits on shelf 2 of the rack, powered from the equipment strip on your dedicated circuit.
The Denafrips Ares takes USB or coax in, and outputs RCA analog. You check the map: the Hegel's Analog 2 input is currently unused. Perfect. You'll need one RCA interconnect pair and a USB cable from the streamer.
The Ares 12th is 250mm wide. Your equipment shelf has 320mm of space. HomeRunbook's notes confirm the shelf depth and ventilation clearance. It'll fit, with room for airflow above.
After installation, you snap a photo of the Denafrips label to capture the serial number, update the signal chain in HomeRunbook, and note the new input assignment on the amplifier. The documentation stays current with zero effort.
"I've spent years curating my two-channel system. When a pipe burst and I had to file an insurance claim, HomeRunbook had every serial number, purchase date, and photo I needed. The claim was processed in days instead of weeks. That alone was worth the subscription forever."
— You, after using HomeRunbook
Start with the free Explorer plan. Map your signal chain, document your equipment, and give your audio system the care it deserves beyond the listening.