Actually, they were Musical Fidelity in the UK and British Fidelity in the US, as a company which had ceased operations still held the Musical Fidelity trademark over here. I was one of their dealers and sold the 270 which was especially good on the Quad 63s. Not for rock at high volumes of course, as one of my customers proved when he would heed any of my cautions about playing them at acid rock levels. I myself, although still a dealer, use used equipment for my own listening and recommend that path to others. I sell VPI tables for example and while the new models have advantages their older ones are still very good. The CJ 350 I use now IS considerably better than the 270, but the 270 is much better than many if not most products offered today. And the 350 costs much more than the 270 did. There are wonderful bargains available on Audiogon, but I don't run into the value for money shopper the way I use to. I am using Spendor S 100s [use to sell them] and find them different from but competitive with my friends Wilson Sasha speakers. HIFICRITIC has commented on the lack of progress, if not regression, in much of CD reproduction. The very top has advances but at an extremely high cost, I am still using my aged Meridian 200 transports with a 1992 Audio Synthesis DAX much of the time, it easily bettered a modern $5000 player IN MY SYSTEM recently. I joked that I was moving up to 2000 when I bought a pair of Focal Mini Utopias last year, despite certain advantages I eventually went back to the Spendors. These were the original ones with titanium tweeters, I paid and sold them for $2200, the current model was , I think, then $12000. But many HAVE to have the latest model, that is why I am still in the business.
Stanley Wallen
Alternative Audio
Stanley Wallen
Alternative Audio