Vintage Tuner-Only wonderful because it's the SOUND I grew up with?.....


I scooped up a lovely vintage 70s, Nikko FAM 500 Tuner.  

When I work from home, I will stream certain Chicagoland radio stations while working.  Several have pretty strong data over stream - per Roon's readings of the connection. 

I plumped the cute yet smartly designed Nikko into place and the machine sounds great!  I've only listened to FM stereo so far. It's been hours, so who knows?  But I sure am enjoying a smooth sound with a bit wider soundstage--I know those to be true. 

I wonder for a second.. . What was so wrong with radio when played over just decent equipment?  

So, do vintage tuners have a subjective sound quality that makes them enjoyable? Or is this the sound I grew up with, which is just great with faults.   

 

128x128jbhiller

The impressions made from your earliest experiences, are the foundation of the Journey that developed with listening to music.

If you are still passionate about Music Replays today, the ownership of this vintage device is sure to stir emotions and catapult one back to halcyon times.

Enjoy, Enjoy, Enjoy. In the same way I do LP's purchased from the late 70's - early 80's, their foibles onboard from a misspent youth are all overlooked and forgiven.

@jbhiller ...So, do vintage tuners have a subjective sound quality that makes them enjoyable? Or is this the sound I grew up with, which is just great with faults.

 

Yes, maybe a little of both. I sure enjoy my FM tuner, and there are times when I enjoy it more than streaming. Particularly so late on Sunday evenings.

I use my 1978 Mitsubishi DA-F10 every day to listen to WUSF 89.7 FM Tampa. Commercial-free college/NPR radio! At night they have a wonderful jazz program - All Night Jazz.