Why Doesn't Kenwood or Technics Make Your Top 5 Vintage Stereo Lists?? Do You Hate Them??

2024 ж. 23 Мам.
100 916 Рет қаралды

This question has come up several times, so we thought we'd answer it in a video!
What are your thoughts? Leave a comment!
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  • In the early 70s working at a gas station when I was 16 and going to high school if it wasn’t for Kenwood’s practice of not overbuilding and pricing I would never have been able to have a quality sound system, to this day I have Kenwood in my collection, there beautiful and sound great

    @russellcardwell6502@russellcardwell650211 ай бұрын
    • Sound is subjective, and the canon of the time was that receivers mattered little for sound, in contrast to speakers and audio cartridges. 18 wpc was 'good' for 'easy listening' music of the 1970's if you had Technics, but it was good for little else. Everything else had more dynamic range (and has not completely disappeared from what has been offered as music. Other brands, like Pioneer, had more reserve power.

      @PaulBrower-qr8hf@PaulBrower-qr8hf11 күн бұрын
    • @@PaulBrower-qr8hf Great Point.

      @KillerKlipsch@KillerKlipsch9 күн бұрын
  • I have owned a Kenwood KR-8010 for 35 years, bought it second hand in the original box for $50.00. It has 125WPC and has never been touched for repairs. Everything works perfect. I do not know how you could get much better than that. Sounds phenomenal to my ears. I absolutely love that thing. My dad is an Electronic Tech and has been since the tube days. he opened it up and was surprised how well it was built. Granted, he did not work on it, just looked at it. I completely understand what you are saying and actually agree with you but sometimes things do not have to be "overbuilt" to be great. Maybe Kenwood engineers understood what good enough meant. I would not trade it for a Pioneer or Sansui if I had to keep them. One thing seems to be evident, if you want a great deal in a vintage receiver, buy a Kenwood, they are not overbuilt/overpriced, they are just right.

    @timbullins2908@timbullins2908 Жыл бұрын
    • In the market for one of those! Beautiful piece of kit. Wish me luck!

      @thrillynewt@thrillynewt Жыл бұрын
    • A friend of mine has a Marantz He has owned new from the early 1970's and he has repaired it on average once every 12 years, he uses it daily while I still have a 1970's realistic I bought used in 1983 I use daily in my garage (by Daily I mean I just never shut it off) that is still playing and never been serviced, My High end reciever gets used on average 2 times a month. On my computer I have a Audio Refinement Complete that I would not trade for a marantz The sound is awesome, and extremely Rare when you find them listed for sale it is usually in Japan.

      @RobertMillerJustme@RobertMillerJustme Жыл бұрын
    • I agree, my brother brought home a Kenwood System from Okinawa in 72’ he passed in 74’ so my Dad kept it. That was the best stereo system in the neighborhood. My friends all had top ( midrange ) like Marantz, Sansui, Technics, Pioneer & Realistic to name a few. I loved our Kenwood

      @haroldbrooks4235@haroldbrooks423510 ай бұрын
    • I have 2 8010's, one I purchased new and one I purchased at a yard sale for nothing. The one I bought new is minty today and has been used very hard, man the party's we had, you could cook on that thing! Never thermally shut down never failed never recapped (I know I should) to this day it runs perfectly. The one I got from the yard sale looked like it was dragged through the mud! Every knob and switch was bent but all the knobs and switch pices were there. So I tested it and it worked! Some static from the knobs and switches so I took the chance and bent everything back into shape and cleaned them washed the circuit boards and face plate, hooked it back up and it works perfectly everything! I can't imagine it was used harder than mine but who knows! This dude's tripping, had many friends who went the 2270 route and I had to fix them all. Most blew channels in the outputs, several had preamp issues in the tone circuits, Strange I thought. All I'm going to say about Sansui is they had problems with circuit boards loosing traces and poor soulder joints. Pioneer receivers early 70's ones would also pop the outputs but by the mid 70's they fixed that and I didn't have any friends to have problems after that. Technics was good until they started using modular circuits. Like he said everyone makes good and bad products but over the decades I just didn't see failures in the Kenwoods, Pioneers, and such like the formentioned issues. Also simpler circuits are usually better sounding, you know "the closer to a wire you get the better the sound".

      @phonebackup8132@phonebackup81329 ай бұрын
    • I bought a KR6030 back in 81, aside from the power/spkr sw switch and a few transistors This rcvr has been and still is a damn nice receiver, I am still using it. The KR6600 is a fine looking receiver, a little more control, this is built like a panzer tank rugged yet handsome with beef, I have that in the den. It really depends on what you want and I think many go for the very attractive silver face, I did, multiple inputs and able to take 2 or 3 pairs of speakers. A vintage Kenwood built in the 70's to me, beats the ass out of a Kenwood built in the 80's.

      @raymondgarafano8604@raymondgarafano86046 ай бұрын
  • I bought a Technics receiver when I graduated high school. It was less expensive than some of the other brands with similar power and features. It worked great for over 30 years till one day it stayed in protection mode. Bummer. You could tell it was not as cosmetically refined as some of the other receivers but still very clean and nice looking. Price was a big factor back then for a kid just out of school. It served me very well.

    @lcee6592@lcee6592 Жыл бұрын
    • some of the larger later SUV amps also had a protection fault i cannot remember which of the flagship suvs I had but it had the power transformer wound with OFC the protecion fault with all the suvs is simple they ran high current the protection relay got hot my one you tap him on his head bang bang and then he works it was the soldered joints of the relay that got hot and caused the connections to be dry joints after 10 to 20 years dry joints you can only realy see with a manifying glass like little carbonated rings on the terminals use a solder sucker remove solder and re-solder the joints good for another 20 years the one i i had was i think suv8x ofc tranformers and black gate supply capacitors

      @christopherhines2718@christopherhines27189 ай бұрын
    • @@christopherhines2718 I wish I knew enough about the circuitry layout in that old receiver. I'd try to track down the problem, but I'm afraid I would cause more damage than good! May have to send her in for a revamp!

      @lcee6592@lcee65929 ай бұрын
  • I freakin love your videos man! The innards always tell the story of a unit. You just relay what I have been thinking for year(s).

    @studydude@studydude Жыл бұрын
  • My Pioneer Sx 780 still rocks since 70’s, will outlast me

    @Trojan0304@Trojan0304 Жыл бұрын
  • Absolutely loved the dog with the Kenwood football. Enjoyed the video and your thoughts, I'm an analog circuit designer and verify your message about quality components and power supply size.

    @CraigHollabaugh@CraigHollabaugh Жыл бұрын
  • EE audiophile, repair tech, and former stereo shop owner here: I agreed with you on Technics and Kenwood receivers. Kenwood, however, made some excellent, well-made serious stereo tuners in the 70's utilizing their RF know-how from making 2-way radios which they still famously do today. Technics had their Pro Series line of separates, a big step up from their receivers. This included their excellent reel-to-reels, as well as preamps, power amps, and tuners. Of course their turntables were legendary, taking the market by storm.

    @fredjoel8113@fredjoel81133 ай бұрын
    • OMG dude nobody cares about what you did to electronics in the 70's jesus total Kenwood jock sniffer here!🤣

      @silversurfer3636@silversurfer3636Ай бұрын
  • Glad you did this video, maybe folks will understand more now. You guys see these everyday. You know what works, what lasts-what doesn’t. Most don’t understand or know these things.🙏🏻

    @vintagevinylvets1187@vintagevinylvets1187 Жыл бұрын
  • I really enjoy your approach to these topics. Straight no BS but respectful always. Wish I lived close enough to visit your shop. I know I would love it. Happy healthy holidays to you!!

    @dboy6896@dboy6896 Жыл бұрын
  • I'm listening to this right now on my Kenwood receiver that I bought new from Circut City back in 1993. And I have used this stereo continuously since I bought it every year too. I bought the Kenwood not because it was cheaper, I bought it because I thought Kenwood was the best.

    @hawkermustang@hawkermustang Жыл бұрын
    • That's where I got my kenwood in the 90's it lasted till 2014 just redid the whole car audio all Kenwood & kenwood excelon

      @jasoncaine2600@jasoncaine26002 ай бұрын
  • Kenwood amps from the early to mid seventies were beautifully made and sounding products. They hired the same designers that made high end Accuphase separates. The same quality was also put into many of Kenwoods integrated amps. Kenwood's Supreme series was a good example.

    @socksumi@socksumi Жыл бұрын
    • Kenwood KT-917 one of the all-time great supertuners, especially with upgraded components.

      @stillastillsfan@stillastillsfan Жыл бұрын
    • @@stillastillsfan Most people do not know that Trio/Kenwood had three product lines. Audio, two way radio and test equipment. Because of being a world leader in two way FM radio, their tuners were 2nd to none! They used basically DSD technology by turning the FM signal's pulse density into PDM audio. I gave lectures on it. I still have a KT615 sales sample from back then.

      @glenncurry3041@glenncurry3041 Жыл бұрын
    • @@glenncurry3041 Today, Kenwood sucks, instead

      @pippocalippo2447@pippocalippo2447 Жыл бұрын
    • @@pippocalippo2447 Today most of them do. Most are just names from the past bought and sold many times over the years. Denon, Marantz, Pioneer and Onkyo used to be separate companies in full competition. Now one company owns them all and makes sure cover different markets and do not compete.

      @glenncurry3041@glenncurry3041 Жыл бұрын
    • @@glenncurry3041 then, Onkyo Is now dead

      @pippocalippo2447@pippocalippo2447 Жыл бұрын
  • I have enjoyed your videos on my new hifi journey. This one has been one of the most informative. Thanks for the content.

    @twat75@twat75 Жыл бұрын
  • Technics 5570 fairly rare and sweet and bassy sound. Excellent phono stage too. Mid to late 70's Kenwood intergrated amps are nice......to look away from receivers for a second. Budget in the 70's compared to anything today has my vote.

    @festersuncle6298@festersuncle6298 Жыл бұрын
  • I respect your justifications here. Vintage audio is a journey and quality is objective to a point. I have owned many vintage receivers over time and enjoyed the ownership experience with most. In the end, I have kept what sounds good to me in my room with my sources despite what others may opine. I’m not sure what you think of Scott receivers but my Scott 385r will never leave my room.

    @Kevin-nc7hs@Kevin-nc7hs Жыл бұрын
  • I’d love to see a video discussing the highest build quality in modern amplifiers. As a technician, you must have some perspective on this. Thanks for the great content!

    @Dave78Ivey@Dave78Ivey Жыл бұрын
    • Pass Labs is what comes to mind for me. Simple execution built to a high standard and serviceable.

      @NovaluxStereophonic@NovaluxStereophonic Жыл бұрын
  • excellent review Kevin. your contribution to vintage stereo is significant. no BS from an expert at the ground level in the service & resale end of the biz (bonus: a tech who can run a biz). tastes in audio, music & aesthetics vary widely, but the finite characteristics of hardware over time CAN be determined. it's also important to note you pontificate only on hardware you know quite well, while also distinguishing what you know w/ adequate certainty from the gray areas subject to opinion / preference / received wisdom. the point you made that most companies who make problematical products will undoubtedly turn over an occasional ace (& vice versa!) is important. on attachment to brand... yes, that is a major goal of modern corporate marketing (amplified by behavioral science), but also learned by consumers (even generationally - that handed-down Rolex, etc.). these days, the science of brand loyalty has been refined to the point that the image is often more substantial / influential than the content ("signature editions", fake rarity, etc). cheaper than investment in product development, + the execs get to hang out w/ infamous "ambassadors". it's getting worse, & will continue to do so until folk get a far better education in the better isms: rationalism, utilitarianism, skepticism & pragmatism (faint hope). anyway, thanks for the walk-through.

    @grumpy9478@grumpy9478 Жыл бұрын
  • Love your honesty. Say what you think and don't worry about who you might offend. Keep up the good work!

    @bkoestring@bkoestring Жыл бұрын
  • Interestingly, designers for Kenwood were so frustrated with Kenwoods penny pinching and design shortcuts that they left and formed Accuphase.

    @hdgboy@hdgboy Жыл бұрын
    • Beautiful made and engineered and the SOUND is just WOW [i got a E 306 MODEL]

      @stephencallil6512@stephencallil65129 ай бұрын
    • Accuphase is high end audiophile grade stuff. If they weren't happy making consumer mid-fi equipment is says more about them than Kenwood. Nothing wrong with either as they both have their market.

      @gregeney@gregeney5 ай бұрын
  • My dad bought his Jumbo Jet new in Thailand and it still works perfectly in 2023. This was my first intro to this space, and we had many house parties with that receiver, some Pioneer speakers and Thorens turntable. He also has a Teac reel-to-reel. He’s had other gear, but that’s the piece that started it all.

    @emeeul@emeeul Жыл бұрын
  • Great Job sir. These videos you are doing are going to help vintage audio thrive.

    @s.t.e.r.e.o.@s.t.e.r.e.o. Жыл бұрын
  • Very well said! For Kenwood receivers I actually do not mind servicing the KR-9600 now that discrete replacements for the power packs are available. Small filters but really pretty unit, SX-1250 walks all over it in same wattage class but hey, sometimes you need handles! Again, well said. Keep up the good work.

    @NovaluxStereophonic@NovaluxStereophonic Жыл бұрын
  • As a poor HS kid buying my first receiver with grass cutting money, the Technics SA-300, I appreciated the price. Thanks for the video. My Technics got me through college and I passed it on to a friend who still has it, but I know my current gear is better. Nevertheless, I have a soft spot for my old Technics. It kicked ass. 😃

    @SteveHart@SteveHart Жыл бұрын
    • Have you seen the new high end Technics Receivers/amps that go for around $10,000? That blew me away they made such high end audio components. But like you, when growing up my first stereo was a Radio Shack. And when I saved up and bought my first Technics receiver, I thought wow I finally made it to the high end of stereo components. lol. Worked fine for many wonderful years connected to my Cerwin Vega speakers.

      @johannjohann6523@johannjohann652311 ай бұрын
    • My first receiver from delivering the newspaper and mowing grass was a Sansui R-30. Tons of problems.

      @mtgreenwoodbustout@mtgreenwoodbustout9 ай бұрын
    • @@mtgreenwoodbustout that's a pity, when you don't have a lot, every penny really counts

      @SteveHart@SteveHart9 ай бұрын
  • Ignore the trolls. The brand loyalty helps them justify their purchase decision years ago. It is insecurity on their part. Another good video. Thank you.

    @edholmwood@edholmwood Жыл бұрын
  • This was an informative topic. I began my hi-fi journey after college back in 2008 - I loved the idea of vinyl & vintage stereos, but didn’t know where to start. As chance would have it I moved into an old apartment, and the previous tenant had abandoned a pair of AR7’s! I loved the look, but had no clue about the brand 😂 The same week I found a silver Technics SA-103 for $5 at a thrift store. I paired them together with an old Technics turntable I was given, and I spent more money on wire than I had on the rest of the system! But it was a warm, inviting sound and I loved it… until I blew one side of the Technics. While doing some research on replacing it I found my “hifi feelings” being hurt when everyone on the forums poo-pooed the Technics. I thought they were saying my ears were bad, or that my taste was poor. In time I realized they were essentially saying the unit was unreliable and you could find much better build/fidelity quality for not much more $$. I enjoy the Top 5 lists because it always gives me some new unit to research, or makes a comparison to something I’ve never heard of.

    @scootb7400@scootb7400 Жыл бұрын
  • Brings back a lot of memories. I was selling for World Radio in the late 70's and early 80's and concur with your quality assessments. Marantz was the acknowledged quality king with Pioneer and Sansui close behind. Kenwood was for promo and loss leaders in ads.Easy to upgrade .

    @timwillson9284@timwillson9284 Жыл бұрын
    • I remember going to World Radio in Omaha a lot as a teenager. I bought my first pair of speakers there. They were 3 ways with a 12" woofer. I think they were a no name house brand. For the life of me I can't remember what they were called. I sold them to a friend over 30 years ago.

      @bmboldt@bmboldt Жыл бұрын
  • I was in stereo retail in the 1980s. Sold Kenwood and Technics units by the truckload. But they did indeed struggle to get the comments we heard for Yamaha and Onkyo. Once Kenwood discovered the profits in CAR audio gear, they worked well into car radios and not as much into home gear.

    @directcurrent5751@directcurrent57519 ай бұрын
  • Another great, honest, educational video. Thank you very much. I learn the most from your videos

    @mattspokane@mattspokane6 ай бұрын
  • Kenwood receivers had some of the best tuner sections. As a matter of fact, Kenwood tuners are highly sought after even today. Technics stuff was good, but they excelled at turntables.

    @billd9667@billd9667 Жыл бұрын
    • Excellent turntables.

      @KillerKlipsch@KillerKlipsch Жыл бұрын
    • i remenber when the tuner was one of the most important features in a system, that was the source of new music and styles that we could never had listen to, FM stations were the source of new music ,today it´s sad don´t even have a tuner conected to my system and in the 70´s i had a tube tuner with multipath and other filters to make FM sound perfect and record new compilations in cassette or reels ,today that is lost, today internet as everything but not personalised shows in FM stations that one could not miss or even have a timer to when not at home the shows were recorded entirelly into reels, than search for the records on several stores

      @RUfromthe40s@RUfromthe40s Жыл бұрын
    • @@RUfromthe40s Local FM is ruled by oligarchs these days. Internet radio is much better. I don’t miss what FM has become.

      @billd9667@billd9667 Жыл бұрын
    • @@billd9667 if internet radio had at least half of the FM stations quality in content and sound quality and anyone could have a radio station ,in my country the best were all pirates ,mine was only legalised after 20 years

      @RUfromthe40s@RUfromthe40s Жыл бұрын
    • I had one of the first run 1200's. It was amazing. I could set the head weight/tracking force(it's been a LONG time)? to it's lowest setting and actually hit the body and it wouldn't skip a beat, and mean a solid thump.

      @andyfletcher3561@andyfletcher3561 Жыл бұрын
  • As a teen my dad had a Kenwood receiver with a pair of larger Kef speakers. He still has the speakers. At some point the Kenwood died after many years service. sounded GREAT!

    @DavidMorley@DavidMorley Жыл бұрын
  • Just tripped across this channel. Looking back a common thing to do when looking at equipment is to just pick it up to see how heavy it was. That helped sort out the ones with the monster transformers pretty quick which was something we preferred.

    @kjisnot@kjisnot Жыл бұрын
  • Great video and budget receivers have their place! I recently built my daughter a vintage system in the heart of that is a Kenwood receiver, but I didn’t want to shell out big bucks for something that she might not really be getting into! Probably later if it dies I’ll get her more substantial unit !

    @primeanalogrecords@primeanalogrecords Жыл бұрын
    • Genau! I just built my daughter a vintage system also: Sansui 221, Kenwood KD1033, and some Paradigm book shelf speakers. Added a Bluetooth adapter to the AUX and she’s set. Good on you bro!

      @Tr1hawaii@Tr1hawaii Жыл бұрын
    • @@Tr1hawaii got mine a Kenwood receiver, Yamaha YPD4 turntable and put a Grado blue cartridge, a thunderbolt plug for iPhone steaming and floor-standing Polk Audios! It’s so great to pass on the knowledge to my daughter I received from my dad and now we share music! Amazing 🤩

      @primeanalogrecords@primeanalogrecords Жыл бұрын
  • So were you actually there back in the '70's? I had the very unique opportunity of being in the middle of all of this. I was in HiFi retail starting in '70. Our stores were one of the first Panasonic/ Technics dealers. In fact we received a batch of Panasonic labelled receivers and were quickly told after putting them out to pack them up. They were being returned because Panasonic had come up with the Technics brand instead. Same models, different logos. In '71 I became a Manufacturers Rep in the S.E. for Marantz, Cerwin Vega, Empire, Maxell, Pioneer Car Stereo, ... My customers included the most highly respected Audiophile level dealers because of Marantz. The Marantz 1060 and a pair of large Advents was the defacto basic system. Then I started to lose business to this other line, the Kenwood 3500 was replacing the 1060 in all my dealers! Less expensive, more power and every of my Marantz dealers said better sounding! Because of my relationship with those dealers and their move to Kenwood from Marantz, I was offered the region for Kenwood and became the Kenwood, AR, AT, .... rep position. I travelled up to 6 S.E. states giving clinics and seminars. Some of my dealers were also Mcintosh. They never promoted it as the superior sounding line. Audio Research, perhaps! Krell! But one explained to me (college town) that a professor would walk in with elbow patches, briar pipe, ... they'd take him into the showroom and lightup and big blue meters. The guy would pull out his check book and sign. Yes the Mc was made better. You could pull the covers and show how all the caps were so neatly all facing exactly the same way! Massive output transformers not needed by others. Yes Kenwood offered a compromise to keep costs down. e.g. the 3500 was lighter than the 1060. Thinner chassis, face plate, ... but parts quality design and build was not compromised. I ran a regional Kenwood repair facility in Atlanta for a while. But pull the covers on a Kenwood KA-907 amp and tell me you can find a more powerful design and parts construction! It blew every integrated amp of the time away. I proved it with a travelling High Speed clinic taking on any amp anyone brought in for full power 10khz squarewave into 8 ohms! Harry Pearson Absolute Sound said the Kenwood L-O7M's were the best amps made and owned them as reference for years! I provided his demo units. I will still put them up against almost any equal powered amps made today. Yes unfortunately as TV/Media started to move in, they were one to start cheapening out. Today almost none of these companies exist. Just names bought by some larger company. Often the same holding company intentionally creating marketing differences between their own lines.

    @glenncurry3041@glenncurry3041 Жыл бұрын
    • Wish I could have experienced it like that. I am sure they were amazing times.

      @skylabsaudio@skylabsaudio Жыл бұрын
    • @@skylabsaudio I've partied with Joe Tushinsky, the founder of SuperScope which first imported Sony and other than a few original components, was the Marantz company. SuperScope was actually a lens technology company that competed with CinemaScope. Howard Hughes, RKO used it. Joe was friends with Hugh Hefner, it was a private party with Hugh at the California Playboy mansion. Got lots of stories!

      @glenncurry3041@glenncurry3041 Жыл бұрын
    • Kevin knows nothing about quality Classic Audio Gear.

      @jackflackatari@jackflackatari Жыл бұрын
    • @@jackflackatari :)

      @johnb9187@johnb91872 ай бұрын
    • I have the Kenwood KR-6600 rated at 60 WPC . What I liked about it was the "Acoustic " controls (like turnovers), which is something not found in many receivers. There are 2 amplifier blocks (DC), but they placed them so close, it looks like a single block. The amplifier blocks are located in the front behind the tuner. A set of heat sinks and output transistors, we call it a block. Just like an engine and spark plugs.

      @Psycho9263@Psycho92632 ай бұрын
  • Hello from Idaho... Love the channel, I've learned a bunch. I'm one of those people who couldn't afford a hifi system in the '70s. So like many of my age group, now I can! Thank you for your insight on all things vintage audio. One request if you please. While you are discussing different pieces of equipment, could you include the dates in which they were made\sold? In this particular vid you went through several Kenwood and Technics receivers, and you only mentioned the decade. It's just something I'd like to learn. It's been a long time since I looked at this stuff in a shop! Keep up the good work! Bob

    @bobkoep2846@bobkoep2846 Жыл бұрын
  • "Sound is dependent oh how you hear things" = words so true. Inner and outer ear are the mechanisms which receive air pressure changes. The nerves to brain are the transmission lines. The brain is where the magic happens where the previous becomes sound, speech, and what we call music. The brain can be trained to "hear" more small intricate details in "sound". The more you concentrate on listening in a quiet, non disruptive environment, over time the more intricate you can hear and that ladies and gentlemen is a key ingredient component in becoming a true audiophile.

    @2wrdr@2wrdr Жыл бұрын
  • Kevin, you did a great job detailing sound and adequate engineering differences, and, you as a repair & business owner made excellent points. I am not a brand snob, I own a Pioneer, Sansui, Kenwood, NAD, and Yamaha. With that said, in my stash of receivers is a Kenwood KR-4600 matted up to Yamaha NS-344 speakers. Over the past few years, many other brands and price points have come and gone like a Yamaha CR-620. Don't get me wrong the 620 is a great receiver but the KR-4600 sound is bolder and warmer, and the tuner is amongst the best also. I have owned this for more than 20 years and as there is no real $ value this receiver makes any speakers I hook up to just sound better. For those on a budget and who find a KR series from the mid-70s cheap and in perfect condition, I say go for it. Love you, Kevin, and keep up the good work.

    @randybarrish1132@randybarrish1132 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks, Randy!

      @skylabsaudio@skylabsaudio Жыл бұрын
    • i forget to mention Yamaha but once i saw a receiver from late 70´s where all inputs in the back had a tiny volume knob ,this to make all sources output sound at the same level, this feature i never saw it again in other brand and a very wise feature , but never found one for me, regards

      @RUfromthe40s@RUfromthe40s Жыл бұрын
  • Being a career electronics tech (geared toward two-way and microwave radio, but audio is a passion), I can really appreciate the "tech friendly" aspects of some of these pieces. RF is the same way. By law, they all had to meet certain specs. But some brands were universally hated by every tech I knew. I'll spare you the gory details. I'm curious about the STK darlington packs. I'm seeing the "discrete replacements" that have been showing up. BTW, my favorite receiver I've ever owned is a Kenwood KR-V86R. Bought it new. It's a beast. It's been my main system for most of its life. It's just now gotten to the point that I feel the need to remove the covers. We shall see. I'd also like to ask your opinion of JVC. I own an RX315, that is currently in the rotation. It's... okay. Heavy as hell, if nothing else. Thanks! Subscribed to your channel.

    @raydar2630@raydar2630 Жыл бұрын
  • Wow. I gotta tell you... this video was an eye opener. I'm a novice to the engineering of these products. I own two Kenwoods; a KR-4070 and a KR-3090, bought with my hard-earned scheckles when I was a teenager in the mid-70s. I also own an Onkyo TX-4500 MK 1 that I absolutely love. But you are dead-on about the empty box thing and the reason why I have been ignorant for so long is, while I was able to crack open these receivers, I never saw the inside of a Pioneer. Never too late to teach an old dog. Great stuff on this channel !

    @Illinois_Steve@Illinois_Steve Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks, Steve!

      @skylabsaudio@skylabsaudio Жыл бұрын
  • Kenwood Eleven Mark I, II and III are nice sounding receivers. They are also very similar in looks to the KR-7600 and KR-9600 receivers that usually don’t have a wood case.

    @supersportimpalass@supersportimpalass9 ай бұрын
  • I like your honesty, and the fact that you are not condescending to those who disagree with you. Kudos!

    @bobmeyer7009@bobmeyer7009 Жыл бұрын
  • I agree, Kenwood made a few great items, but most of their products were ho-hum. Their L-07 series was really good as was the KD-5xx/6xx turntables. They made pretty good FM tuners. I have an L-07TII tuner that sounds and works great. I've always regretted selling my L-07M amps. I worked at a hifi store back in the 80's and Kenwood was never a big mover. Like you said about Technics.... turntables and reel to reel tape machines were the best from them.

    @MashBill@MashBill Жыл бұрын
  • just found this channel and i''''''m 65 got my 1st. componant system when i was 11 it was a midland am/fm 5w.pch. 3'' wood pulp box's was nice 1/3 the formal stereo size w/ inputs for my realistic cassette a brand new form of tape .. even now i feel the pride i had in ownership an wet corner in my eye but yea what you know is always how you will go .. love work site you guys i bet just kinda live it , psthat midland was a sears brand in 1968 ..peace and keep it real.. istic , i told you.. peace out - a fan

    @jamesrogers2386@jamesrogers2386 Жыл бұрын
  • Excellent perspective. Thanks for your candid and extremely educated opinion. I've always been a vintage Marantz guy with lots of reasons why....

    @jsmorton674@jsmorton674 Жыл бұрын
  • The truth sometimes hurts, but when you tell it, it's a hoot! Great video and cheers!

    @fullwaverecked@fullwaverecked Жыл бұрын
  • I had a Kenwood Model Eleven MK II. I thought it was a beautiful receiver and gave me no problems. Sold it in a weak moment. I do get what your saying about build quality. Regarding my Marantz 2285, the filter caps are huge and when I restore it, they will be a challenge. The filter caps on my JVC JR-S600 are like beer cans and I have never seen anything built like my Pioneer A-90 integrated. Love your channel, Tom

    @tomlindalewis2146@tomlindalewis2146 Жыл бұрын
  • Im 56 and have always been into audio...but its mostly car audio. I used to install amps...speakers and tape decks back when I was 14. I just took interest in vintage stereo receivers and my first must have unit was the one my parents had in our family room that I would push to its limit playing Kiss Alive 1 on vinyl. I just found a working Fisher CA-880 that is in perfect condition that I plan to use in my garage driving some old Pioneer speakers with a Cerwin-Vega powered sub. My local repair guy called it a "department store stereo " when I asked him about parts for it if needed (it looks hardly used...no vented caps..lights...knobs switches all work fine). I get what he said...but when you want to relive your youth...you look for that piece of history. Buying this unit and watching your videos has me itching to start a collection of the more quality units from the 70's and 80"s. By the way..my Mom still uses that same Fisher rack stereo that is in the same spot in her family room that I cranked up till the garage doors vibrated in the early 80's. Thanks for the awesome videos you post!

    @fb6performance271@fb6performance271 Жыл бұрын
  • I’m glad you showed photos of the guts of these receivers. It says everything about the build quality. I wish more people in audio cared about build quality and repairability as opposed to straight looks.

    @petenamlook18@petenamlook18 Жыл бұрын
  • This was such useful information. Avoided some dogs and know what to look for! I did find a great Technics by Pansonic gem by the way! Nice job always guys!!

    @marcparsons1726@marcparsons1726 Жыл бұрын
  • My very first receiver was a 40Watt (KT4040?) Kenwood from about 1970. It ran fine for over 5 years until a transistor died. But of course I always wanted a Marantz even at the ripe old age of 15. I finally got one, about four years ago ...a 4000 series CD player. Kenwood made a great tuner though. The KT-7000. I owned that from 1971 until 1999 (still working) when I traded it in for a new Amp. The main reason I went to "separates" as soon as I could was that I could pick and choose the best-made tuner, pre-amp and amp for the money. I DO have a (1994) DENON Receiver on my small living room system. Very reliable and nice sounding unit. Never had a problem with it...(knock on virtual wood).

    @johnnytoobad7785@johnnytoobad7785 Жыл бұрын
  • Well said Kevin. Thank you for sharing your thoughts with us.

    @SamuelBarrPhotography@SamuelBarrPhotography11 ай бұрын
  • I totally dig your honesty buddy. Like all things - for the most part, you get what you pay for.

    @Audiomainia2310@Audiomainia2310 Жыл бұрын
  • All of the brands had some lower end models. My Technics SA-1010 was made in 1983 it cost $850 new and is still all original and works like new and has one of the biggest power supplies and pair of filter caps I have ever seen and is a beast of a build internally. Technics made the most powerful receiver ever made the SA-1000 (330 WPC 8 Ohms) I wouldn't part with it for anything and the same goes for my higher end Kenwood gear. I also love my vintage Pioneer gear as well.

    @j.t.cooper2963@j.t.cooper2963 Жыл бұрын
  • I had a Kenwood KR 9400 and I agree the volume POT is proprietary when I thought I could just go out and buy one on Allied or Mouser. Fortunately after lots of deoxit and moving back and forth I was able to get it working again.

    @MW-ou5yt@MW-ou5yt Жыл бұрын
  • I had never heard this info regarding Kenwood before? My first good receiver ( I bought brand new ) was a KR2400 back in 1977. It was entry level but suited my needs at the time. Love your channel!

    @mikebottiaux5850@mikebottiaux58505 ай бұрын
  • My amp, tuner, and cassette deck are 1979 Pioneer units, love them and won't change. Good discussion.

    @debbieverret4033@debbieverret4033 Жыл бұрын
  • I owned a Kenwood KA-6006 and matching tuner myself back in college in the early 70’s and loved it. I think that may have been the last time they made decent stuff as by the 80’s it was clear they were declining and I turned away from them myself. I would gladly have anything they made in the 60’s or 70’s but would not tough anything from the 80’s on.

    @richardelliott1810@richardelliott1810 Жыл бұрын
    • They were going strong then, that series of integrateds is great. In general, I rate their integrated stuff very highly, better than their receivers. The KR-9400 has excellent build quality, I think this guy would have to agree, but perhaps the build quality started to decline with the KR-X600 series.

      @solobueno7483@solobueno7483 Жыл бұрын
    • Totally agree, had the same experience, but love the look of their 70s integrated amps tho.

      @JukeboxAlley@JukeboxAlley Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for the straight dope! I have a KR-6140A that I need to get worked on as the power switch has stuck and a couple lamps are out. I have had this for 50+ years as it was my first unit and I think it deserves to be saved. I have it paired with Heresys from the same era. I appreciate your knowledge and skills. It may not be a top unit but there is something special about the golden age vintage products that need saving! Kind of like dogs: Not a purebred but a rescue is a loyal companion...Keep up the great work!!

    @davec.1045@davec.10459 ай бұрын
  • Hey Kevin we’ll done an honest and truthful video, I currently own a pioneer SX1250, Kenwood KR9600, Kenwood KR8050, Toshiba 7100, Sony V5, all have been totally restored , it’s taken around two years to get them done, when I picked one up from my tech I would drop the next one off, they all sound great , if it wasn’t for Kenwood’s practice in pricing I wouldn’t have been able to put together a decent sound system when I was in high school back in the early 70s, I have listened to a lot of your videos more than once when seeking reliable advice, much thanks Regards Russell Cardwell

    @russellcardwell6502@russellcardwell650211 ай бұрын
    • Appreciate it, Russell!

      @skylabsaudio@skylabsaudio11 ай бұрын
  • I bought Technics back in the day because I could afford it. It sounded good, and I paired it with good components like a Technics turntable and Pioneer cassette deck.

    @JamesSavik@JamesSavik Жыл бұрын
  • I've had Kenwood integrated amps and I've had Technics receivers all of it was good if you ask me anything that comes out of the 1970s is super good and I'll tell you another thing that's outstanding and that was the Kenwood tuners those things kick ass. The same goes for Sansui Pioneer all of them were good back then.

    @markrussell.@markrussell. Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for the vid, appreciate the straight talk. I recently bought a couple of Kenwood integrated amps (KA-71 and newer A56) the latter coming with a speaker set. For the little money I have been really impressed with them. This stuff can go for basically free on the used market these days. I think there is a massive improvement of stereo performance of these amps vs current day surround receivers, even if they are not as robust as the great Sansui and Pioneers of the day. These days home cinema receivers become the way to listen to stereo music for many and my god, how they fall short for that task... Cheers.

    @zakblue@zakblue10 ай бұрын
  • These are the same people that ask "How many watts are your speakers"

    @randy6999@randy6999 Жыл бұрын
  • Idea...Top 5 kenwood, JVC, Technics Receivers That Almost Made Our Other Top 5 lists.

    @carloreubenvongerkin9760@carloreubenvongerkin9760Ай бұрын
  • the more videos i watch the more im really liking this channel great content

    @geferris83@geferris83 Жыл бұрын
    • Glad you like them!

      @skylabsaudio@skylabsaudio Жыл бұрын
  • Congrats Kev, you really know what you're talking about. Keep on it, cheers

    @AP-eu4og@AP-eu4og Жыл бұрын
  • Kenwood was the first manufacturer to "de-content" their products in the mid-70's. Their early solid state models such as the KA-2000 and KA-2500 were well built and had a warm sound.

    @acrossthedial@acrossthedial Жыл бұрын
  • Interesting analysis. I have had in this order, starting in 1977.... Pioneer SX650, Kenwood KR770 (bought in military in Japan), used Mac 6100, Nikko Gamma 1, Mac MA252, Kenwood KR4070, and a Vector Research VR5000. The last two bought used for $50 a piece on CL in almost mint condition, just for me to play with. The KR4070 only needed a controls cleaning and one side tuning dial fuse bulb. The tech was surprised it all tested to spec otherwise, and extremely clean inside. I rotate it out with my old original Pioneer for a second room system and both sound just as good to me in non critical listening, with all sources. Both share similar features, and with same power and speakers selection on same knob, but the Pioneer does have one extra tape monitor. At this model tier, I don't think either one looks overbuilt inside and both look very close components-wise. However when I see my big brother's Pioneer SX1250, it along with the similar SX850-1050 models are of course very overbuilt! Still, I like the simple Kenwood look with amber backlit dial, all metal build quality, and sprayed on dark gray texture surface. My Pioneer started peeling off of some of the wood color vinyl surface after many years of use, and has the particle board sides. No biggie, but I think the Kenwood is slightly nicer in that respect, and has knurled twist knobs for speaker connectors. So many choices of great vintage gear out there, for little money, so this and your other videos are quite informative to new buyers of vintage. Keep it up. Thanks!

    @KenV62@KenV6211 ай бұрын
  • I totally agree!! Most people support the brand they grew up with, no matter what!! I did not want to be that guy. I bought as much as I could afford for the past seven years and have listen to most of the seventies Japanese brands. I like a few of them but that 6100 behind you Kevin is a personal favorite right now and sounds better than any of the Japanese amplifiers I've purchased so far. Thanks so much for the video and actually showing pics of the insides of these little knock off stereos. I have too worked on many and you come to realize which ones are worth the effort and which ones are not. More then likely it will be McIntosh and Marantz from now on for me. Thanks.

    @harlest71@harlest71 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for your honesty. Having had a certification in electronics, everything you have said is spot on about components, their quality or lack of quality and the price point objective they were trying to reach. In other words, in most cases you get what you pay for.

    @gregorytrane7828@gregorytrane78285 ай бұрын
  • Very cool stuff Kevin. I had a KR-7400 receiver in 1976. It felt and looked like a well-made, well laid out, aesthetically pleasing receiver. Like most buyers, I didn't pay attention to what was inside the cabinet. I'd say it sounded "good" with a pair of efficient "good" speakers. That would be my assessment of most receivers of the day. Unlike you, I consider sound to be the most important factor in judging hi-fi equipment. Of course, build quality can be directly correlated to sound quality. Yamaha and NAD were a modest step up in audible sound quality, and so capable of taking advantage of moderately better speakers. I bought a pair of pricey (at the time) KEF 104 large bookshelves. The KR-7400 wasn't up to the task. I don't think ANY receiver would have been. I clipped and blew out a couple tweeters. I replaced the Kenwood with a Dynaco ST400 amp and Nakamichi pre-amp, and o....m....g. Saying it was night and day doesn't go far enough. Was it the power and headroom of 200 w/channel? Yes, but I'm sure that even a 200 w/ch receiver would not have come close to the sound of these separates. My main point being - at least on a pair of high end speakers like the KEF's I had, I don't think there would be a big audible difference between comparably spec'd receivers of the early-mid '70's - whether Kenwood, Marantz, Sony, Sherwood, HK, Onkyo, Fisher. Technics did look and feel cheaper to me, and had the stigma (fairly or not) of being a subsidiary of Panasonic. I think all of these brands took a turn for the worse in the later 70's and 80's.

    @stu3700@stu3700 Жыл бұрын
    • It cheapened out very hard after the 1980s. The home audio necessity was eclipsed by cable TV and all the video explosion of the 1990s. Younger generations got away from clunky material investments and mini systems were good enough.

      @directcurrent5751@directcurrent57519 ай бұрын
  • Great honest review! I feel like so many people in the comments didn't actually listen in the video. You never said Kenwood or Technics receiver would "never last longer than 10 years" or "Will never sound as good to your ears as Marantz" or anything like that. You simply stated that they were NOT MADE with the same level of components as some other brands. I had a 2007 dodge charger. Bought it brand new with 17 miles on it. Just sold it last year with 368,000 miles on it. It was a GREAT car. Loved and it gave me few if any problems. That doesn't mean a Mercedes or Cadillac may not be built better with better quality components.

    @mrhoffame@mrhoffame2 ай бұрын
  • Very frank and straightforward opinion and i don't see anything wrong in this. Thanks for this eye opener !!

    @sanjeevmoudgil5857@sanjeevmoudgil5857 Жыл бұрын
  • another good video ! so glad you don't waste time/energy talking about the "sound" as everybody's ears, equipment & listening room is different. as someone who likes to "open the hood" and facilitate my own repairs, I am most interested in build quality and serviceability (parts availability). always looking for the better built/high performing underdogs that fly under certain brands "high tax" status. I feel the mid - low power (

    @72vespa@72vespa Жыл бұрын
    • While sound can be subjective a critical lightening A/B test of amplifiers/receivers with all else the same will reveal there can be a big difference . My Carver blew away my Kenwood in every way but looks.

      @leekumiega9268@leekumiega9268 Жыл бұрын
  • I still have 2 Kenwood models bought in the 70’s, that are in beautiful working order. A 20watt version and a 50. Regular cleanings are all they’ve ever needed.

    @ronaldelliott4373@ronaldelliott4373 Жыл бұрын
  • I walked into a stereo shop in 1977 at age 17 . I was looking to buy the best the first time . Geoff, the owner pointed out one that was on sale for 700 instead of 1000. ( Southern Ontario ) That Sansui 9090 still rocks today! Now it is need of some lovin, and will be going in soon. I'd say I got lucky way back then. :)

    @Gord4well@Gord4well Жыл бұрын
    • That particular series is very good. I think it's the best receiver they ever made. I have many sansui, G series and the 5050 to 9090 and even tube stuff (SM) series that dates back to 1962-63 and the later A series 500A and 1000A and they're quite good too. Sansui started as a transformer company.

      @xminusone1@xminusone1 Жыл бұрын
    • i had a sansui pre and amplifier but my father gave me his pioneer when buying a revox, i have to say that the sansui was stoped only some 7 years ago i restored it to sell it by a lot of money, but we are talking of brands that never went bad in 50 years of use ,some new brands will never work for 50 years without problems

      @RUfromthe40s@RUfromthe40s Жыл бұрын
    • almost forget to refer that in late 70´s bought the high-end amplification system from H.H.Scott and works till today with nothing to add, in speakers i have pioneers, JBL´s ,altec lasing,huge studio monitors bought in 1972, tannoy´s, celestion ditton series, Mission, wharfedale and Technics, Grundig, had some cerwin-vegas enjoyed them for 10 years and sold them because someone told me that the red menbrane was getting rotten in a lot of speakers ,mine were ok .

      @RUfromthe40s@RUfromthe40s Жыл бұрын
    • I bought a Nakamichi TA -3A in 1985-86. Its SLAMMS ! I still have it 😁

      @kanecooks8643@kanecooks8643 Жыл бұрын
    • My Sansui R-7 still works with a pair of Bose 601's .

      @richardduke6930@richardduke6930 Жыл бұрын
  • I remember wanting a Marantz reciever as my first big power product. I already had a Marantz cassette deck. I couldn't afford one so I bought a 8010 Kenwood with 120 WPC. I'm glad I got the big lifetime warranty with it. Pacific Stereo had to repair it 3 times as I abused and blew it up. Once I was out of college and not using it as a PA amp it lasted many years. The sound quality was great. That said, I bought a R-100 Yamaha and still have and use it. The quality is great and have bought several Yamaha AV recievers and a CR-820 and have been very happy with them. I do have many other brands including Pioneer, Marantz, Onkyo, McIntosh, Carver, Klipsch, JBL, ADS, B&W... Quality is often secondary on peoples minds things break so they are thrown away...true quality is rare now and the cost differences are larger than ever.

    @kurtburkhardt5862@kurtburkhardt5862 Жыл бұрын
  • I really enjoy your videos. Great info.

    @MrJeff0204@MrJeff0204 Жыл бұрын
  • Not to contradict the video, but back around 1974, my brother bought a Kenwood receiver. Pretty sure it was 85 wpc. It was absolutely gorgeous. The heavy flywheel on the tuner was so cool. We loved it!

    @stevengilmore1509@stevengilmore1509 Жыл бұрын
  • Great and informative opinion piece on your topic in this episode Kevin. Reminds of the age old contractors motto... 'Speed, Quality, or Price' pick any two. Lol As I personally always value quality, product longevity, and serviceability in the items I buy. Therefore, I totally agree with all your observations and opinions on this matter. The best advice I've received over the years always came from asking specific industry repair technicians what manufacturers they felt made and built the best products, and why they thought so. I live up here Vancouver BC in Canada and would really enjoy one day meeting you and seeing your store, as I really respect your candid advice and down to earth demeanor on audio and Hifi equipment . Keep up with your great content.

    @richardnantel949@richardnantel9493 ай бұрын
  • Yamaha is a great brand and Sugden as well....These products don't get mentioned here and on Just Audio either but your vids are a treasure everytime....Theres so much of great gear out there. I have tons of vintage gear...currently running a Yamaha MX1000 with an immaculate Sansui AU777A as a pre amp driving PolkRTA12Bs and Kef104.2 and this has stayed in the lounge for a months now....My perfect setup after mix and matching 18 pairs of speakers from Monitor audio MA3s to HPM100s to Polk rti12s with vintage Yamaha , Marants , Technics , Sansui G9700 among others....so much good stuff out there

    @vineshnaidoo9402@vineshnaidoo9402 Жыл бұрын
    • Pretty sure Yamaha's were in two of our best of lists (Best Receivers Under $300 and Favorite Integrated Amplifiers). One of the most under valued brands of the 70's.

      @skylabsaudio@skylabsaudio Жыл бұрын
    • I love my 2245 MARANTZ & PIONEER PL45 turntable for Asthetics but the INCREDIBLE SMOOTH SOUND from my 2003 YAMAHA RX V640 is AMAZING !!

      @MatrixUSA@MatrixUSAАй бұрын
  • I’ve purchased new mid 70’s Marantz. I’ve also purchased mid 70’s Technics. Still using a Technics SA-600 45 years old today. I’d put it up against anything comparable.

    @bobk3840@bobk3840 Жыл бұрын
  • Agreed. First receiver I owned back in 1983 was a Technics SA-450, 50wpc. Not much, but ok to drive a pair of 2-way 8”speakers. Bought new for $249 from Best Products, in Richmond VA. Returned 2 units for the same issue-scratchy sounding slide volume control. Switched to Pioneer Elite around 1991 separate components, and still perform flawlessly to this day. I just recently bought a McIntosh MC-462 and slowly upgrading the entire system (in time). Probably use the P Elite system in the bedroom. I really enjoyed the video, and information.

    @patchesw3815@patchesw3815 Жыл бұрын
    • I remember that exact BEST. Amazing store to look at toys at Christmas time. Innovative architecture and shopping experience - sorry they want away. I think my mom bought me a WalkMan from there once.

      @emeeul@emeeul Жыл бұрын
  • I picked up a Kenwood kr-6050 and it sounds amazing through my vintage Jenson high fidelity speakers from the 50's . But definitely would not out perform a pioneer sx-1980 or macintosh lol. All depends on sound and your setup. Great video!

    @michaeldicarlo5540@michaeldicarlo5540 Жыл бұрын
  • Well spoken. "Vintage" doesn't equate to "Better," as so many Craigslist posts seem to infer. There were levels of quality (and price) in 1978 too. It's good to know what's under the hood.

    @dwahnaslowdown8887@dwahnaslowdown8887 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for the video!Very informative.

    @rayhollingshad3580@rayhollingshad3580 Жыл бұрын
  • i was selling all these makes mid 70.s and often asked which was best,i took the top off the pioneer sx434 i had bought myself and still have and saw that pioneer had wrapped wires in a coil on a post before soldering,i was blown away by this quaility of idea so no poor joints in years to come,over here i always aquanted kenwood with food mixers rather than hi fi,im in the uk

    @mandymoo7406@mandymoo7406 Жыл бұрын
  • Love the videos brother. Thanks for the info.

    @johnnysowell865@johnnysowell865 Жыл бұрын
  • I had a SU V9 , it worked really well. Specs were way better than most, back then, and it showed when comparing.

    @shaynegaudet6131@shaynegaudet6131 Жыл бұрын
  • I've 3 hifi systems all mix and match Sanyo,Marantz, Sony,Technics and Memorex all with Pro-ject turntables. All brilliant to me mate. 🇬🇧 Carry on with this great content 👌 I'm still catching up.

    @petertate8366@petertate8366 Жыл бұрын
  • I had a Technics SA-404 50 watt receiver thru college and beyond. Perfect for two big speakers with 12”s! It worked great for 8 years before it was stolen. The late 80s Technics digital receiver replacing it was definitely lesser built. Today I have a top Yamaha receiver.

    @RichardinNC1@RichardinNC1 Жыл бұрын
  • Dude, one of your best videos yet! You were dead on accurate. Wish I’d have kept some of the stereos I bought and sold in the 70s. What do you think of the Aiwa AD-F990 cassette deck? I forget what year I bought one new from the overseas BX but I loved that cassette deck when paired with my Marantz receiver.

    @nixieandyakyak3837@nixieandyakyak38379 ай бұрын
  • Both technics and kenwood put their high end into integrated amps and separates. Receivers sold well at the mid range; kenwood kr-9600, kr-9050 and technics sa-800, sa-1000.

    @fernarias@fernarias Жыл бұрын
  • I find this discussion very interesting. I got into the business in 1976 at about 20 years of age. I was already into the hobby by 16 and started hanging out at a "high end" shop that sold McIntosh, Crown, Quad speakers, Advents, B&O etc. That store begat another that also sold Yamaha, Tandberg, B&W along with the others. I remember taking my little 20 wpc Sony Receiver to the Mc Clinic to be tested. So I went to college away from home and got this job at similar shop - Crown, Phase Linear, but our bread and butter was Japanese gear. We sold Yamaha, Pioneer, Anna's Technics. Our relationships for choosing these brands was partially financial. In those days, Yamaha was an exclusive or partially exclusive brand, so we could sell it at retail. Pioneer and Technics were sold most everywhere, so we had to compete. Putting the right combination of speakers, turntables, amps and cartridges could be very profitable. Amps were about 40% profit at retail, speakers were 50% and up, cartridges often even more. Technics may have had an upper echelon for their top tables and we had access. So we were often able to sell them at retail. Cartridges, like speakers (especially if you include private label) were all over the map. I remember a Grado cartridge that retailed for $50 with a cost of $3.50 and a $75 one for 7.50. anyway, I'm just saying it factored in and was always in my head when talking to customers. There are books written about when to implement that in your thinking and when to just recommend the best, or best for them. And very often giving them options. Anyway just another part of the discussion. We thought Yamaha was premium. When they went from the 00 series to the 20 series, we wondered how they got so much more for less. A CR-800 had 50 wpc for $580, an 820 same power for $450. Our repair guy said they HAD made some more cost effective choices but didn't feel in was inferior. I think Yamaha was preparing to go to a different distribution model and felt they had to go head to head with the Pioneers of the world. My co owners thought Pioneer was good especially when the 50 series showed up. One of our speaker companies' CEO, who kind of put us under his wing was always trying to change our minds about these two brands. He not only said what we suspected but encouraged us to listen to the 750 versus the CR 820. He said the 750 was better sounding, and had a more Natural sound than the "Natural Sound" Yamaha. He said the Yamaha sounded too bright, clinical, crisp, hard, fatiguing. Interestingly Yamaha made a couple of statement amp using the transistor co-developed with Sony, called the VFET. They said it sounded more like a tube amp. I agree. They also made a statement speaker called the NS-1000. It was more controversial with people on both ends. The speaker had a revolutionary mid range and tweeter made from vapor deposited Beryllium. It tended toward brightness. But they never sounded better than they did with the VFET B-1 and B2. And real tube amps. I bought a pair of NS-1000s and got Yamaha's top integrated amp of the time. The CA-2010. It was good but they did sound a tad bright in comparison. By the time the 40 series came around and then especially the next, all of which I sold, it was obvious they were going mass market. We quit recommending it. By those early 80s receivers they did not sound close to as good. I always liked the sound of the Pioneers but I had little experience with Marantz and none with Sansui. No one seemed to sell them. All I knew what that a lot of guys came back from Viet Nam with Sansui. But then a few years ago, I helped an old friend put together a vintage system for his office. I have a couple of great vintage equipment repair guys in my city. And I was visiting one. I'm still an active hobbyist and have some vintage equipment of my own. I asked him if he had any receivers he might have to sell that he would recommend. He said I got this Sansui 771. "Really", I said. What about the Yamaha here (CR-820). That's when he told why it was not as good a selection. And that there were a couple of proprietary parts that you really can't get anymore, new. And a couple of other things. So he suggested I take the Sansui home and try it out. No charge. So I got it home and immediately I knew I was hearing the best receiver I had ever heard of. Great warmth, a focus more down in the lower mid range, which brought a great foundation, and warm, wonderful bass. Not the fastest, but it seemed more natural. Only 38 watts per channel but who cared? So, learning from my repair guy, I've changed my whole hierarchy of best sounding receivers of the era. And, like most of the Japanese brands, the mid to late 70's are very good in many ways, construction and sound. But maybe the early mid 70's sounded even better. So kudos to you. I was right there and I had it wrong. Experience and advice have convinced me. I have had a small Kenwood integrated, and still have a Sansui TU-717. Somewhere before I buy the farm, I'm going to find a earlier 70's Sansui amp or integrated and put that into my system. In the intervening years I've owned high end amps from Conrad Johnson, Quicksilver, McIntosh and others, but I don't think I'll be disappointed.

    @dainawilburn2390@dainawilburn239010 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for this video about my beloved Kenwood. I certainly see your point. Looking back as a 15, 16 year old back then Kenwood was great for me. My Dad had given me a Pioneer receiver with 2 small Pioneer speakers and they were great probably even better when I think about it. The Pioneer was much heavier than the Kenwood but I hated the Pioneer speakers because they had weird speaker plugs that I couldn’t switch out the speakers

    @haroldbrooks4235@haroldbrooks423510 ай бұрын
  • I feel fortunate. My Kenwood KR-V6040 discrete power amp receiver has been a work horse. I bought it in 1992, and it jams to this day. One benefit of this receiver is that it doesn't get hot. It barely stays warm, even after hours of blasting it loud.

    @commonman317@commonman317 Жыл бұрын
  • Am a fan of the HK x30 series. I can't say enough about my 730 on my primary system and my 330C on my secondary system. I know both of those units are tech favs!

    @paulbeck9825@paulbeck9825 Жыл бұрын
    • HK rocks with sound. Good sound. I just never warmed up to the looks until the later models

      @SinnerSince1962@SinnerSince196210 ай бұрын
  • Excellent !!!!! Very well said !!! I find it hard to believe that there is any vintage gear is much better than McIntosh ! Expensive - but still affordable for most. Nice video as always !!!!

    @vwmountainman9701@vwmountainman9701 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you!

      @skylabsaudio@skylabsaudio Жыл бұрын
  • I remember graduating in "72" I bought my first stereo, it was a Magnavox all in one system, a receiver, turntable/changer and speakers, the receiver and turntable were on a cart with wheels and a place for records on the bottom, the speakers you could place on either side about 6' away! 😅.. It served me well for about 3 or 4 years. Then I got a Marantz, never looked back, boy how I wish I still had that Marantz.!

    @steven3379@steven337911 ай бұрын
  • I started typing this comment 5 mins before I hit play, 5 mins in and its my thoughts exactly. Ive been dabbling with stereos for 30+ years but only getting into the repair side in the last 3 years. On the exterior they may look the same but once you get under the hood its clear as day, Its always the Kenwood or Technics that may have big watts but then you get inside and your like "Where is everything". Its either a larger than needed case to look beefier, Theres usually no bias/dc offset adjustments on kenwood/technics and some hokey resister setup. Large circuit boards covering multiple functions vs single boards per section. I find Sansui / Pioneer / Yamaha / HK have more discrete components for the same wattage / year, Just feel like a more quality build to me. I havent found a Kenwood yet ( not saying they are not out there ) that I didnt wanna sell after repair, None have wow'd me like the other mentioned brands.

    @quiksr20@quiksr20 Жыл бұрын
    • Agree 100%

      @skylabsaudio@skylabsaudio Жыл бұрын
  • About 15 years ago I picked up a Kenwood silver face at a garage sale for $25, i forget the model number. Once home the first thing I did was open it up. I was suprised at how light duty the internals appeared to be. It was supposed to be a 30-ish wpc receiver but my 15 wpc Pioneer sx 450 had an equivalent power supply and even bigger filter caps. It sounded ok and cleaned up nice but the whole experience left me underwhelmed and a bit confused because Kenwood was supposed to be, in my mind, equivalent to Pioneer, Marantz, etc. I ended up gifting it to a friend, who was happy to get it. A better friend got the Pioneer, lol.

    @haqitman@haqitman Жыл бұрын
  • Enjoyed your video interesting subject of the less popular brands. I am in aviation and repair communication and navigation sytems for years now. A buddy from work asked me if I would look at his old JVC AX-Z911 amp. First thing I thought (didn't say it though) was throw the piece of junk in the garbage. Anyway I looked at it and fixed it. This thing was an over built quality class A amp beast. Was even more impressive after it was fixed and hooked up to speakers. I told him I would buy it if he ever decided to sell. His answer was "never selling it way better than any Pioneer or Sansui he had in the past". I have personally owned Marantz, Pioneer and Yamaha all 70s and I have to admit he was right.

    @bizeerog2281@bizeerog2281 Жыл бұрын
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