Your experience in "in their day" brands/components that you remember foundly?


I love music and have enjoyed "high-end" audio for several decades.

 

With this being said, I am interested in hearing what may be your 

"golden oldies" that you have owned?  For me there are many that 

were part of my beginnig.  The original large Advents and a Yamaha 

CA-1000 started my "better gear" travels...that lead to Dahlquists, Magnepans, 

and seperated from Audio Research, Conrad Johnson, early Classe and 

many others.  What were your "roots" that helped your journey?

 

jusam

Sansui AU9900 , that was my first real component.   I gave that to my brother and replaced it with an Apt Holman preamp and Apt 1 amp

I was fortunate to go to work for a McIntosh retailer in Florida at the age of nineteen in 1972. We sold Pioneer as our opening price point offerings, and we had " complete systems" set up by price point starting at $499.00, I believe. For newbies, it made product selection easier, and we could easily step them up to the next price point by simply letting them listen to the difference. Some of the brands/models that were popular: Altec, JBL, Garrard, Dual, ADC (straight line tracking TT), Teac, Bose, Sony/Superscope (tape decks only), Tandberg (a fabulous brand), Revox (another amazing brand), Soundcraftsman, and  Marantz. I did not understand the Marantz quality until some years later. I wish I had my hands on some of the old gear traded in for new McIntosh gear, especially during the clinics. We were one of the early Bang & Olufsen dealers- that was a curious but not particularly interesting brand to me. I sold JBL L-100s like cordwood. We sold Soundtech receivers too, but not many takers- it was just easier to sell the newest Pioneer gear. By 1975, we were selling discrete and SQ quad receivers- an interesting idea to compel the consumer to buy new gear, and my boss let me buy many of the new quadraphonic LP's to demo- there was not a lot of content in 1975. Good memories!

Technically, the ADC brand did not get any traction until maybe 1977. They got out of alignment with some regularity, but the $50.00 spiff per unit was awesome for a brief time- I sold 50 units that month, which was a lot of dough in 1977.

those that are gone ...

chartwell/rogers ls3/5a

music reference rm9 rm10

hafler dh200 101 pre

muse 100

bel (brown electronics labs) 1001

ariston rd11

grace f9

micro seiki dd40 ma505

kenwood kd500

infinity black widow

 

those that are still going strong (in one form or another)

spendor, proac, quad

audio research, conrad johnson

magnepan, rel

musical fidelity, krell, classe

linn sondek, vpi, townshend, dynavector, koetsu

 

 

Had the classic Dynaco trio, FM3T/PAS3/ST70 with an AR-XA, but really miss the JBL-SA600 I purchased in 1971 to replace the tube gear. Both were driving JBL L77s.