@Ethan Kurland
Thank you for that advice Ethan; you read my current place along the journey well --- even right up to the point that I had just inquired with Bok about such a pot not moments ago; perhaps there is a mystical destiny at play here
Your words about the importance of clay in relation to other brewing parameters (and the tea itself, of course) are sound and wise. As a naturally analytical person that also transitioned into tea out of modern specialty coffee, I think my baseline approach to tasting and preparing tea is already rooted in "experiment experiment experiment" (maybe even too much, but I think I see that phase as a necessary step along the journey). I nearly exclusively brew tea with comparative tasting methods every morning [either two similar teas to one another, or the same tea brewed with different parameters, compared to its counterpart]. I happen to enjoy experiencing tea this way, and am lucky to have a partner who enjoys tasting attentively and sharing thoughts. I cannot claim to know much, and a far from mastery - but the nuances of brewing are something I am at least confident I will continue exploring for a long time; so in that sense it's important to note that I'm not looking for a holy grail piece of gear that will magically make all of my tea amazing (and thats a real risk, plenty of it in the coffee world too, with $3,500 grinders which will do nothing for poorly roasted beans or inattentive preperation, but plenty of folks willing to shell out the cash hoping for an quick fix). So in that regard, I genuinely appreciate the cautionary advice - it is real and necessary.
You read me well though, in my heart I know I will remain curious; and pattering about amassing lower quality pieces that will fail to quench my curiosity will cost just as much but leave me dissatisfied still. Wiser to make a sound investment with a good person, accept the possibility that perceived gains may likely be marginal, and take it for what it is.
In a way it's a blessing I am not in the least bit wealthy, and so must focus and limit my choices

--- I am not really a collector type, but I am known to chase the upper ends of skill or quality, and have always been this way. With a skill: passion, practice, and attentiveness can bring you closer to your goals. With teapots, you either have the piece in your hand to brew with, or you don't - no two ways around it

Luckily there are folks who have devoted their time and energy into cultivating the skill of finding and learning the nuances of these wares, in a way and breadth I likely will never have the opportunity to. Likewise with those of you who source tea. So I am genuinely grateful to the community in that way, for sharing the pieces of the big puzzle that they have access to with the rest of us. I hope that, one day, I can give back to the community in a meaningful way myself.
phew, that got sappy quick

but i do mean it!