Since I built my starter, my love has really improved and my dog learned to poo in the toilet.
There's so much conflicting info out there. Many take Mr Malty's numbers as written in stone, myself included. His number show a giant increase in yield due to a stir plate. Here's what I got for a 1.1 OG, 5 gallon ale. Looking at required starter volume:
Simple Starter: 6.55 L
Simple Starter with O2 at start: 4.91 L
Starter with Shaking: 3.78 L
Starter with continuous aeration: 3.28 L
Starter with stir plate: 2.46 L
I have no idea if their numbers are correct. I'm not willing to do a controlled fermentation experiment either. I work in a research field, and I know first hand that you can chase your tail for years trying to validate or disprove somebody else's experiments and ideas. There's way too many factors here, and for us no means to quantify the results accurately aside from finishing gravity.
So, if a stir plate means I get away with a much smaller starter, its worth it. Less DME, dont need a larger flask. Also, it was fun to build. Like many, I just used stuff I had sitting around. Nowadays though, you can get a voltage controller cooling fan on amazon for 10 bucks. Stuck a hard drive magnet on it and mount it to the bottom of something magnetically nonpermeable (thin wood, plastic), and you are in business.