Vintage HiFi

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  • Jimmy ConnorsJimmy Connors Posts: 117,777
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    I do not use them anymore (no space) but I have:

    Pioneer Amp
    Nakamichi Tape Deck
    Akai Tuner
    JVC Equalizer
    Onkyo Turntable
    NEC Speakers
  • JBlinkJBlink Posts: 2,932
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    Still have my LP12 (Mission 774 arm, Grado cart) from 1980 and it did still sound great until the "WOW" arrived. I reckon it might be bearing damage from fitting and removing the 45rpm adaptor - or maybe power supply. Can't justify the expense to fix it right now :(
  • Dave48Dave48 Posts: 170
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    Excellent I run a similar TT with Aro arm into a NAC 32.5 Hi-Cap & NAP 250 all chrome bumper
    Simon :)

    Sorry to say I don't use it as much as I did as it was moved to the spare room to make way for the Home Cinema System.

    You still can't beat the sound of a good "Vinyl" set-up.
  • russellellyrussellelly Posts: 11,688
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    A ~30 year old Yamaha stereo. Tape deck died years ago, but it's now connected to a DAB adapted and an iPod, as well as playing vinyl.
  • Mike_1101Mike_1101 Posts: 8,012
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    Dave48 wrote: »
    Sorry to say I don't use it as much as I did as it was moved to the spare room to make way for the Home Cinema System.

    You still can't beat the sound of a good "Vinyl" set-up.

    And how good is the sound on these "home cinema systems"?

    I see them as a re-hash of 70s quadraphonic sound but perhaps I'm missing something.
  • Dave48Dave48 Posts: 170
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    Mike_1101 wrote: »
    And how good is the sound on these "home cinema systems"?

    I see them as a re-hash of 70s quadraphonic sound but perhaps I'm missing something.

    Only use the Cinema system for TV. For serious listening it's off the the spare room, but than get called anti-social, you can't win.

    Good old "Quadraphonic" for people with "Four Ears!"
  • rob1973rob1973 Posts: 4,236
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    Dave48 wrote: »
    Linn Sondeck LP12 Turntable
    Linn Ittok Arm
    Linn Troika M.C Cartridge

    Naim NAC 62 (S) Pre-amplifier
    Naim NAP 90 Power amplifier
    Naim High Cap power supply

    Naim NA-IBL Speakers

    Still sounding sweet :)

    That's vintage porn not vintage stereo!! :D

    I live on a boat now and as space is a premium I have to use my Mac Mini as a media server and buy music from iTunes! But before I moved aboard I was seriously considering a Quad 33/303 combo off ebay, with modern caps and upgrades if money allowed. Can anyone explain how the current dumping worked? I used to love reading theories in stereo mags one week which were quickly rebuttled in the next issue! :D

    My fave stereo was my 2nd ever. Garrard record player with a stock tone arm and ortofron cartridge. Nad 3020i amp and some Wharfedale Ditton II speaker. Scored the lot for about 50 quid on the flea market over a year..MINT!!!
  • rob1973rob1973 Posts: 4,236
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    Dave48 wrote: »
    Only use the Cinema system for TV. For serious listening it's off the the spare room, but than get called anti-social, you can't win.

    Good old "Quadraphonic" for people with "Four Ears!"

    I'm sure my big bro had a Yazoo 12" mixed in quad!
  • ianradioianianradioian Posts: 74,765
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    I still have a vintage set up upstairs in the bedroom; Celestion XR15 speakers, Sansui AU70 valve amp. and TU70 valve multiplex tuner, Shure M44-7ed fitted to a Goldring GL69 turntable..........................completely different sound to my main hifi downstairs, but vinyl sounds lush on it-especially Rumours by Fleetwood Mac, or City to City by Gerry Rafferty!
  • Dave48Dave48 Posts: 170
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    rob1973 wrote: »
    I'm sure my big bro had a Yazoo 12" mixed in quad!

    There were some "Quad" records released, I have a copy of "Tubular Bells" which sounds great.
    I still have a vintage set up upstairs in the bedroom; Celestion XR15 speakers, Sansui AU70 valve amp. and TU70 valve multiplex tuner, Shure M44-7ed fitted to a Goldring GL69 turntable..........................completely different sound to my main hifi downstairs, but vinyl sounds lush on it-especially Rumours by Fleetwood Mac, or City to City by Gerry Rafferty!

    Yes, the two you mentioned are good and I've one or two "Direct Cut" viynl's including "Medal" by Pink Floyd which sound brilliant. I miss the good old days of scouring record shops...brings a tear to my eye :)
  • Nick_GNick_G Posts: 5,137
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    Resurrecting this old thread: I bought a Yamaha T-85 tuner in the spring and it is now the main listening tuner in my system. The audio it can produce on a good broadcast is fantastic; in fact it's responsible for some of the best audio I've heard through my hi-fi.

    This tuner dates from around 1987. God knows what you'd have to pay for a new one with the same performance.
  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 229
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    Grundig Fine Arts System.
    Cassette Deck
    CD
    Amp
    FM / AM Tuner
    Digital Satelite Radio Tuner (adr)
  • gemma-the-huskygemma-the-husky Posts: 18,116
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    Dave48 wrote: »
    Linn Sondeck LP12 Turntable
    Linn Ittok Arm
    Linn Troika M.C Cartridge

    Naim NAC 62 (S) Pre-amplifier
    Naim NAP 90 Power amplifier
    Naim High Cap power supply

    Naim NA-IBL Speakers

    Still sounding sweet :)


    Blimey -Can we ask - how much did this all cost?


    I cant remember all the model numbers.

    I think I first had a radioshack unit with a TT on top and an amp underneath - which replaced a dansette! (haven't got the dansette unfortunately!)

    Then I bought a s/h system with a GL75 turntable. The thing was, the amp made a humming noise underneath the phono input, nut not when the TT want running - so the amp was OK - The deal was good even if the TT was faulty - but it
    turned out the TT transit screws had never been released, and the TT was fine.


    Not too many changes, but I ended up with a

    Rega Planar 3 turntable (£12 for a new rubber band the other week!)
    Sony separates - amp/cd/minidisc
    Toshiba tuner
    JVC tape deck
    monitor audio speakers

    the sony stuff about 20 years old (does that sound right for a minidisc?), the rest older still

    and about 500 singles, and rather fewer LPs


    lovely thread though - brings back memories of a Laskys we had in a Leicester - but I think some stuff came from Richers, and others from Comet!
  • robbrarobbra Posts: 524
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    STD deck/ SME3009/Shure
    QED A230 Amp or SonySTR-2800L if I want the wireless
    Mission 70 speakers
    Sounds timeless and better than anything I've heard lately but wish the amps had remotes :)
  • Glawster2002Glawster2002 Posts: 15,209
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    My "vintage" amp and Cd player both sadly died, however my parents are still using my early 1980s Technics record deck. I upgraded my deck to a Rega P3 @ 5 years ago and it could be argued that is a 1970s deck as very little has changed since the first one! :D

    I've also still got my 1980s Mission 732 speakers too in the loft!
  • JulesandSandJulesandSand Posts: 6,012
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    At the heart of my system is a Michell Orbe SE with an Ortofon cartridge and a Trichord Dino.

    A Myryad amp (not vintage I know)

    A pair of Tannoy Definition D700s which are probably now in the vintage class.
  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 10,327
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    Boy, this is an old thread!
  • JulesandSandJulesandSand Posts: 6,012
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    RobAnt wrote: »
    Boy, this is an old thread!

    Vintage even :D
  • spiney2spiney2 Posts: 27,058
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    Pure archeology (that's a dig!).
  • rjb101rjb101 Posts: 2,689
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    I'm using a JVC AX1 amp with a few modern bits plugged in but the volume knob is a bit crackly, well a lot crackly, can anything be done?
  • rjb101rjb101 Posts: 2,689
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    Oopps double post :o
  • emptyboxemptybox Posts: 13,917
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    My main system is a Marantz one from 1980.

    Turntable - 6025
    Amp - 1070M
    Cassette - 5050M
    Tuner - 2060ML
    Speakers - HD660

    The amp, cassette and tuner are in a metal cabinet, and I have a Sony CDP-M77 CD Player from 1989 in the bottom compartment.

    I had to replace the turntable belt a couple of years ago, and also had to re-foam the bass speaker cones at about the same time.
    Also I have to admit the cassette deck no longer works, and is just there for show. :D
    But apart from that, it sounds just as good as it did 30 years ago. :cool:

    The system cost £450 in 1980 (21st Birthday present)
  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 4,994
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    emptybox wrote: »
    The system cost £450 in 1980 (21st Birthday present)

    youve given away your age! lol
  • Ash_735Ash_735 Posts: 8,493
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    Classic Hi-Fi Separates are the best! I have an Aiwa separates set from 1990, was given to me years ago, and even though the CD Deck, Tape Deck and Vinyl Deck all stopped working (replaced Vinyl Deck now), I kept the Amp, and bloody hell was that a smart choice. Here I have a piece of equipment from 1990 that's hooked up to my computer via S/PDIF from a 2010 Soundcard, outputting at 48Khz/24bit LPCM Stereo and the sound is just brilliant and clear and I'm very happy with it.
  • Mike_1101Mike_1101 Posts: 8,012
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    Interesting to see so much old equipment in use - it was obviously well made.

    I wonder how many houses still have these? A great collectors item - but not to listen to, although probably considered hi-fi when new.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lH8h57CU08Q&feature=related
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