Friday, 29 August 2014

Pioneer PL-15 Turntable And Audio Technica AT 216EP Cartridge

       Pioneer PL-15 Turntable And Audio Technica AT 216EP Cartridge
                                       New Photos Of My Vintage Turntable 













Friday, 25 July 2014

Luxman L-505S integrated Amplifier

                                    This Is My Luxman L-505s integrated Amplifier
                    LUXMAN L-505 S LIMITED EDITION ULTIMATE FIDELITY HI-END AMPLIFIER





Thursday, 24 July 2014

Pioneer CS-77A Speakers


 Pioneer CS-77A Vintage Speakers 1971 All Information:

The Pioneer CS-77A is a bookshelf type system, perfect for compact quarters, that handles a full 65 watts of music input but can be used with a relatively small power amplifier.
The enclosure is made of genuine walnut, hand finished, and a pleated saran grille cloth and grille gives the distinctive look of fine furniture.

The woofer and the midranges have high quality cambric surrounds, so they

won't rot or deteriorate the way foam surrounds do.

These speakers employ Pioneer's "FB" pulp material in the woofer and


 midrange drivers. These pressed cones are made of specialized pulp material 

that is stiffer and has better damping than standard paper cones. The result is

 audibly different with solid and deep base that sounds natural and not

 boomy. 

Midrange presence is outstanding with the characteristics of the "FB" cone 

material.


Specifications

Type: 4 way, 4 driver loudspeaker system
Frequency Response: 25Hz to 20kHz
Power Handling: 65W
Impedance: 8Ω
Bass: 1 x 12" cone
Midrange: 1 x 5" cone
Tweeter: 1 x 3" cone
Super Tweeter: 1 x multi cellular horn
Enclosure: infinite baffle
Grille: pleated saran cloth
Finish: walnut
Year: 1971
Dimensions: 14.5 x 25 x 12.6 inches
Weight: 37.5lbs  17kg
This is my Pioneer CS-77A , i was found speakers in excellent (near mint)condition only tweeter foam are very dry
Sound very natural,very comfort,i like :)























Sunday, 13 July 2014

Sansui Seven Stereo Receiver




In many ways, the Sansui Seven is a culmination of our long experience and arduous research in the design and manufacture of quality audio-only equipment.
It's tuner section combines a FET equipped super sensitive FM front end and an IC-equipped FM IF amplifier which ensures outstanding FM selectivity and superb tone quality.
It's amplifier section is a 160 watt masterpiece designed, tested and proven to bring out every subtle shade of the original sound, regardless of the program source, free from distortion.
Overall, the receiver is equipped with practically all the switches, controls, inputs and outputs that you would ever need to enjoy today's most advanced Hi-Fi sound reproduction.

Specifications

Tuning range: FM, MW
Power output: 36 watts per channel into 8Ω (stereo)
Frequency response: 15Hz to 40kHz
Total harmonic distortion: 0.3%
Damping factor: 50
Input sensitivity: 2.5mV (MM), 150mV (DIN), 150mV (line)
Signal to noise ratio: 70dB (MM), 80dB (line)
Channel separation: 50dB (MM), 50dB (line)
Output: 150mV (line), 30mV (DIN), 0.8V (Pre out)
Speaker load impedance: 4Ω to 16Ω
Semiconductors: 72 x transistors, 42 x diodes, 4 x zener diodes, 1 x IC
Dimensions: 440 x 140 x 328mm
Weight: 14.3kg

Friday, 20 June 2014

Wednesday, 18 June 2014

Technics ST-G7 AM/FM Stereo Tuner


The Technics ST-G7 was Technics best tuner of the 1980's (and beyond) and possibly the best Technics tuner ever. Selling for approximately Ј375 GBP in 1984, it was a high-end design costing around 3 times the price of an "ordinary" Technics tuner of the period.
It was a tece soundwise is that there is occasionally a touch of sibilance on vocalshnical tour de force upon launch and Technics engineers really pushed the boat out with this one. The claimed technical specification is superb and so is the subjective performance. I have one of these in my own personal collection and it has just about the lowest noise and least interference of any tuner I have used. Sound quailty is ruthlessly neutral. This is not a tuner that will flatter poor quality compresssed pop music broadcasts but give it a good signal from BBC Radio 2, 3, 4 or Classic FM and it can sound superb. Particularly notable is the extended, powerful bass (when present in source material). It sounds remarkably clean and clear throughout the frequency range. The only criticism I can make soundwise is that there is occasionally a touch of sibilance on vocals