Man we was poor, but a neighbor’s dad had one of these with a turntable and gigantic speakers, I’d never hear anything that sounded that good, he was a Bing Crosby fan and Big Band fan, but to a poor kid it was like the coolest thing ever, they also had a Chrysler Imperial, drank real cokes and everyone had their own rooms.
We had this exact model in our living room for my entire teenage musical journey back in the ‘70’s. It never failed or faltered. Listened to so much great rock’n’roll at extreme volumes on that puppy. Lost track of it after I went off to university, but wherever it is now, I suspect it’s still working perfectly.
Nice find. I went to the auto wreckers a couple of weeks ago to get a spare tire. After finding that, I went looking around, and came upon this wrecked van that had an old stereo hanging out the back doors. Upon a closer look, it was a Kenwood Kr-7070a from 1970 to 1971. About the only thing keeping it from falling completely to the ground was the cord being tangled around some sheet metal equipment that was in there. I went in from the side door, and rearranged everything to get it free. While doing that, I noticed another receiver in there, it was a Pioneer SX3600. My main interest was the Kenwood. It was pretty heavy, so I just left it there. After paying for the tire, I left. I got about a mile away, and decided to go back to ask about the stereo. I told the guy about it and he said I could go get it. I managed to carry it back to the office that was about an eighth of a mile away. The veneer on the cabinet was lifting all over so it looked in really rough shape. When the guy behind the counter finally got off the phone, he took a quick look and said, take it. I couldn't believe how lucky I was. When I got home I did the dim bulb start, and everything worked, except the FM. It comes through, but all garbled, and the signal meter doesn't move much, even though my other receivers show strong signals with the same antenna. I figure either a capacitor, or a bad transistor is the culprit. I went back a couple of days later, and grabbed the Pioneer. It works but the left channel is running hot, with distortion. I guess a recap and maybe replacing some transistors will fix it. We all get lucky every now and then.
Cool story and find. Start with a deep clean and inspection. Look for cold solder joints...burt resistors. Clean the switches / relays and pots and tuner capacitor before going balls deep on a recap.
@@Poppinwheeeeellllllieeeeez Yes, will do. I have already removed and repaired two toggle switches that felt like they weren't working properly. Because this machine was out in the weather for who knows how long, they were ceased up a bit, and the little ball bearing on top of the toggle inside had popped off. Thanks for the advice.
@@johnhornsby7578 Yes, the auto tune feature is nice. The fm is all garbled, but the tuner automatically locks on to stations just fine, and the stereo light comes on, so I suspect something on the mpx board to be bad.
I would use a vacuum cleaner, an old tooth brush, and some compressed air to get Rid of the Dust and Dirt!! CRC make an electrical contact cleaner. For some music small systems just Do NOT cut it, most Rock bands still use valve amps because they sound GOOD man, just do NOT let them too warm!!!! A couple of years ago power company had been working out in the street, when they turned on the power again a large power surge blew my amp bastards $400 damage killed the amp, eventually i found a suitable amp to run my speakers!!
My first receiver was a Marantz Gyrotuner bought in high school with my money from a dishwashing job I still have it best purchase ever! Thanks for posting this great video!
treat all frame and metal work with Bullfrog. wipe front frame panel and shafts with cloth/wd-40 , spray down bottom of circuit boards with deoxit d-5 and tilt to drain off. protects old unit from corrosion. spray down rear panel with wd and wipe down everything. tighten all screws and boards gently .
A gem. After cleaning it will be right near to new. I remember getting excited over my first Marantz which was bought through money earned on a paper route. I believe it was a 2035. My younger brother has hadn't a number of years.
Always enjoy your videos! Love seeing how you diagnose the problem and correct it. Also, the fact that these beautiful stereos are saved from the scape pile.
Once I found Akai AA8080 1972 or 1974. By the time I found it it was 40 years old. I took it home, plugged in power socket and turn it on. First I heard crackles and low frequency hum, but nothing burnt. So I decided to leave it turned on for a couple of hours. When I returned to receiver, it was silent. I thought it died, but no, it was alive and worked like new. Capacitors got full charge and restored their capacitance, so I didn't need any repair or restorations except buying new knobs. Second time I looked inside receiver was 6 years later when a couple of capacitors started degrading so I replaced them. So it still works and give me joy! Now it is about 50 years old and it feels and works fine.
Scored a 2220B with wood sleeve out of the metal recycling hopper at work 13years ago. Plugged it in w/out speakers -no dial lights. Rolled the tuner knob until it landed on a strong FM station, and the Orange stereo light lit up, so I knew then it was worth cleaning up and checking out further. It ended up needing only only new array of lights behind the dial. 🏆 Still using it regularly!
A acquaintance of mine told me he knew a old man that sold random stuff at a swap meet . The old man sold him a tube McIntosh 275 for 80 bucks , the old man told the guy they were scrapping a bunch of old tube junk at the recycling plant like nothing . This back in 2007.
I have a Marantz 4100 quad receiver that I have not used for 30 years and a thorens turntable that will need a new belt and maybe a new needle I would like to sell to someone who will appreciate it and use it more than I have
If your guy had it in a shop, he was blowing it out with compressed air periodically. If you look at the areas that had dust build up, it was areas that the air nozzle couldn't get to. The outer shell doesn't have openings there? Either way, awesome find.
What a great find, and not a whole lot to do to get it sounding good again. Love the cats in the last few videos! Just like mine; they have to be in the middle of everything! Great to see you working on Hi-Fi equipment again. Looking forward to more in upcoming videos.
Another good video ! recommend leaving the ratchet handle in the toolbox & using a 1/4" drive handle instead, less chance of "over-torquing" "snug" is the proper torque spec.there. also, after blasting the tuning air capacitor clean, notice that there are two little bearings on the air capacitor shaft that I feel should get a drop of fine lube. as a Mechanic myself, I like all moving surfaces to have a bit-o-lube ..... look forward to more repair videos .. cheers
Got that exact model from one of my clients when she was moving. It sat for along time so I took it in an had all the pots and switches cleaned. Got it hooked up to my Scott quadrant 101s and Pioneer HPM 100 speakers. It literally shakes the house. Blows away my Sony receiver I have in the living room.
I used to sell and service Marantz. They were great!! Very nostalgic watching you. The biggest problem I had on the early 70's models was when the push button switches were made with silver plated contacts. They were constantly tarnishing on seldom used buttons. Luckily they changed the design, but it was a pain going through and changing them. 🙂
wow it was like you read my mind sir, as a customer, I have but the contacts are just terrible sometimes, I have to use toothpicks to bind up the side of the button just enough to where they make contact. 🙄🤔😏😬
My wife, a front-end manager at a thrift store brought home a Marantz 4230 quad receiver that she paid the store $30 dollars for . Hooked it up and works perfectly. I announced a $300 dollar bounty to the donation guys if they get in a Pioneer 1280 and hold it out for her and a $500 bounty for a Pioneer 1980 receiver. They have also been offered bounties for anything McIntosh.
Excellent video. You are a great presenter and clearly explain what you're doing. That receiver reminds me of the stuff coming out when I was in high school that I dreamed of owning, but was too expensive for me. I loved your cats, too!
My wife and I had a stereo receiver that looked just like that. We bought it around 1982. It was awesome. The tuner looked so cool. . Not sure if it was the same model. The volume control wore out and had dead spots and I couldn't get a new part and cleaning it didn't help. I was a stereo tech for a couple years. I might still have it in the basement for someone to find some day. They don't make them so pretty anymore.
Took old magazine off my Pioneer SX780 & hooked up my old Pioneer 518 turntable. After 22 years plays old 70’s Fleetwood Mac records great. What a lucky find for you
I’m not sure if you’ve already done this, but I’d love a tutorial on what kind of cleaner works best for various types of controls. I thought Deoxit D5 was the go-to contact cleaner for just about everything. But, apparently that’s not correct. Thanks.
Hi I believe the fur on the heat sinks is from cigarette smoke (nicotine oil and dust) collecting on heated surfaces, I've seen this many times on TV sets in the 60's while I was servicing them Rich
WOW!!! Those were sold in every "department store" (Macy, Sears, Nordstrom, Gimbles, Service Merchandise, etc ) sold these stereo systems known as "rack units". Each came with a cabinet with four or five shelves, between two and four components (turntable, cassette player, amplifier, equalizer, tuner, etc.) and a hefty pair of speakers and as you can see they "looked" powerful. Almost everyone had one in their home in the 80's, they were as popular as flat panel TV's are now. They ranged between 200 to 400watts per unit and while they were more than enough for residential use they weren't even a fraction as powerful as they look. Great Find, thanks for the blast from the past...
Back in the day (1987) when I was taking an electrics class I repaired a Marantz amplifier for the school library. I did it on my own, it wasn't a class project. I did buy the output transistors as well as the transistors for 2 stages before the output transistors. It takes me back more than a few years.
Every cat I know has the qualities of an inspector. Love this Marantz, they were not marketed as well as other receivers in Canada, hence one of these gets this Canuck quite excited.
I got a small am/fm radio going with regular wd40 - sprayed all the switches and pots and the thing works perfectly now. It was an experiment and seems okay. Love this 2226 and dont remember seeing these. I had a new 2230 back in the day. Great receiver. Ran some RS Nova 3 ways speakers with it. What a find.
Your video was interesting to watch, I have the exact same unit in perfect working order, I run a cassette player, turntable and four speakers. The sound and performance are exceptional for its age. Thank you for sharing!!
You said ; That we can't hear what you can . Your microphone are very good . I can hear everything like I'm in there . That amp is a capsule time . Remarcable !
Excellent video. My Marantz 2220b cut out sometimes when I play record or reel to reel on one channel. I notice it doesn't cut out when I played the radio. They sure are nice looking receivers!
I definitely must say that the old style stainless steel brushed aluminum finish on these older units we're a lot stronger and a lot more capable of doing much greater things than some of the new digital stuff
I still have a Sherwood S-9910 and a Marantz 2385 sitting in my basement from the good ole' days. Currently I'm pushing a set of Cornerhorns with a Phase linear 400 and my daughter just had a meltdown for a Pioneer direct drive turntable she wanted for her vinyl collection. Funny what was old is new again, glad I hung on to my old equipment. thanks for the video.
The problem I find with sheet metal screws are all the little metal bits that fall onto the circuit board. I clean the bits off when taken apart, but when reassembling I can only hope that nothing shorts out. It's totally bad practice to use such screws and I see it all too often, even on units costing several thousand dollars.
I have one in my basement, it’s been there for 35 years, moved and never set it up! Not sure of the model, I’ll have to look. I’ve thought about it over the years, it was my dream stereo when I was a young man.
Great video. Looks Mint. Way to deliver a solid vid !!! Those wafer switches can be a huge PITA. Before I give up on bad ones and pull them out.....I use a little metal polish on pipecleaner and poke it in and turn it around with my drill on a very low speed and lowest torque setting. Flush with 99.9 ipa and a few fresh pipe cleaners....the hit it with some flavour of preserve it. It has never failed me, but exercise extreme caution and work gently. I hate risking FUBAR pulling it all apart and de / re soldering the million pins.
I work at a PC recycling center. You wouldn't believe all the old stereo equipment we get. Sadly it all gets destroyed... My boss has let me have a few pieces, but after I got a couple of Kenwoods (KR 7600 & KR 4070), a Marantz 2245, and a Sansui Six, he cut me off. I'm trying to convince him to let me do "trade-ins", if/when better pieces come in. Lol Also got a Technics RS 630 TUS cassette deck & a Peavey UMA 150t II amp/mixer, and a complete Bose AV 3-2-1 III set up with 2 extra sattelites and the remote. (Had to search through 1800 pounds of wire, to find the $75 link cable.) I don't even own a TV. Lol I used to be a DJ and my boss insisted I take a pair of Yamaha MGP32X mixers, we got from a local college. I cleaned them up, got them working properly and donated them to a couple of churches. Edit: Spellchecker got me.
Thanks for the great video! I have a 2226B that I have restored myself. Everything went well but the FM tuner needs alignment. I haven't started that's since you need a signal generator and a scope for that which I don't have. If you would be so kind demonstrate how it's done I'd definitely work up courage to invest in the instruments. But without a clear guide I'm a bit afraid :)
That's a loverly bit of kit, it just needs a bit of love and i would expect it work for years more. I have an old pioneer SA 706 amp, it was found sitting on top of a dust bin, just waiting for the rubbish collection men to take it. Lucky for me a friend saw it and it ended up at my house. The mains power switch had failed, that's the reason it was on the dust bin. That would have been a shame. I was going to say ' XRayTony B is great, you might like his repairs' Sorry waffle mode lol.
I have one of this ,and I’m still using it !and you know what!this thing is monster especially when you match the speaker on it bro,this is gyro tuning for fm,I believe this amplifier is 250 watts per channel,,,I suggest to add equalizer on it so you can hear the sound quality,,,
Great find and good job👍👍 A good cleaning is usually mandatory, then the repairs if needed but you know this. Looks like a new unit now, will make someone very happy...you? Power ratings are usually conservative, just insurance I suspect. Thanks for another enjoyable video, furry helpers a plus.
This video brought back a lot of great memories. My parents had a Marantz Receiver similar to this one back in the early ‘80s. I remember the first time I adjusted the weighted tuning dial as it just felt “expensive” unlike a a tuning knob from anything else I used before, It also power to drive these large 3 way Acoustic Research speakers with real bass. That stereo system sounded amazing! Hard to believe that was like 40 years ago.
Awesome job! It's great to see how well that Marantz 2226 survived over the years. I have four Marantz receivers with my favourite being my Marantz 2270 and aside from their excellent sound reproduction, visually they are so stunning. :)
Last year I had my 2270 rebuilt by a guy in Kitchener. Cost $750 and well worth it. It’s near 50 years old and in mint. Still have the original bill too….from Bay/Bloor radio! $699! The days when we lived pay cheque to pay cheque lol. Also recently rebuilt 4 large Advent Speakers (the ones with the beveled edge). And paired everything up with my Thorens TD 160. Love vinyl! I wish that I knew what I know now. When I was younger! Ooh La La
Wow, what a great find, you can say it's on the low end but I know a maranze that fell 2 stories in a house fire, was soaked by the fire department and still played,
Back in the late 50s, I got interested in receivers. Transistorized was just beginning to come on the market. So, instead of a tubed Fisher receiver, I got an transistorized one. I still have the receiver, but, now I wished that I had gotten the tubed model. The sound is much warmer and fuller than the one with transistors.
I still have my dads marantz 2226 in storage and it too suffers from the same issue with the volume pot picking up interference in its sweep! I thought it might be an issue with leaking capacitors but your video has shown me that it may just need a refurbishment! Thank you for this video; you've got my like!
Grandpa had good taste in receivers. I wish that contact cleaner trick would work on the tuning caps I have on the type of radios that I work on, but usually they're just so dirty that I remove them and put them in the ultrasonic cleaner, then re-lube their bearings when I re-install them with new rubber isolation washers as the old ones have usually turned into hard little pucks.
I enjoy the great content of your channel. I am a technician from germany, came to your channel because of the maranz stuff. I love repairing old vintage audio as well as working with old motorcycles. You make a great job in explaining! I think everyone can learn something, no matter if he/she is a professonal or not. Even your car-content is great! I always hesitate buing any old car because they are consumpting a lot of money time and space. Might be better stay with the tiny motocycles and elecronic stuff! But a cat is really missing in my household :D
I bought one today, will have it next week, a lot of cleaning to do 🤭 but one thing i don't get watching your video... why not first remove all the dust and then use the Deoxit, now all the dust slips inside the potmeters, sliders etc. 🤨but further of all a nice video 🍻
Now I want to see that receiver hooked up to those big Altec Lansing studio monitors after you rebuild them. The cats help you diagnose the problems. Lol
I regularly play a Fischer studio standard from the seventies that I got from my son in laws friend that his father had put in the basement in a thick cardboard box for many years. I connect a pair of pristine Sansui speakers from 1980 I bought for $14.00 At a thrift store. I know nothing about audio but it sounds so deep and rich and my friends from the seventies are transported Back to the house parties we used to have back in the day.
Nice video mate, I used to have a Marantz full system in the 80's I got rid when CD's came out. Always wished I had kept it a superb system and sounds.
I currently have the model 2235B in my man cave. In Florida that's a garage. It is doing the same things as the one you just cleaned up. I believe I could clean it the same way you just did. And I need at least 3 bulbs. I sure would like to get this thing rocking again. Where do I get the bulbs. I don't think Radio Shack is in business any more. I didn't know how to clean the controls and you just showed me how! I bought that unit new in 1975. Along with the model 6200 belt drive turntable. I am inspired to get that receiver sounding clean again. Thanks I liked and subscribed!
Man we was poor, but a neighbor’s dad had one of these with a turntable and gigantic speakers, I’d never hear anything that sounded that good, he was a Bing Crosby fan and Big Band fan, but to a poor kid it was like the coolest thing ever, they also had a Chrysler Imperial, drank real cokes and everyone had their own rooms.
We had this exact model in our living room for my entire teenage musical journey back in the ‘70’s. It never failed or faltered. Listened to so much great rock’n’roll at extreme volumes on that puppy.
Lost track of it after I went off to university, but wherever it is now, I suspect it’s still working perfectly.
45 years down the road my Marantz 1060 still works like a champ.
I had Superscope R-350 in the 1976 . My first Hi-Fi. I gave my syster and she still uses it today.
How lucky can one guy get! And you didn't even spend one penny on parts to get it working and playing BEAUTIFULLY! Thank you for sharing your luck!
1970’s - Marantz was the absolute best of systems. There were other great brands also, but people talked about Marantz the most.
Nice find. I went to the auto wreckers a couple of weeks ago to get a spare tire. After finding that, I went looking around, and came upon this wrecked van that had an old stereo hanging out the back doors. Upon a closer look, it was a Kenwood Kr-7070a from 1970 to 1971. About the only thing keeping it from falling completely to the ground was the cord being tangled around some sheet metal equipment that was in there. I went in from the side door, and rearranged everything to get it free. While doing that, I noticed another receiver in there, it was a Pioneer SX3600. My main interest was the Kenwood. It was pretty heavy, so I just left it there.
After paying for the tire, I left. I got about a mile away, and decided to go back to ask about the stereo. I told the guy about it and he said I could go get it. I managed to carry it back to the office that was about an eighth of a mile away. The veneer on the cabinet was lifting all over so it looked in really rough shape. When the guy behind the counter finally got off the phone, he took a quick look and said, take it. I couldn't believe how lucky I was. When I got home I did the dim bulb start, and everything worked, except the FM. It comes through, but all garbled, and the signal meter doesn't move much, even though my other receivers show strong signals with the same antenna. I figure either a capacitor, or a bad transistor is the culprit. I went back a couple of days later, and grabbed the Pioneer. It works but the left channel is running hot, with distortion. I guess a recap and maybe replacing some transistors will fix it. We all get lucky every now and then.
Cool story and find. Start with a deep clean and inspection. Look for cold solder joints...burt resistors. Clean the switches / relays and pots and tuner capacitor before going balls deep on a recap.
@@Poppinwheeeeellllllieeeeez Yes, will do. I have already removed and repaired two toggle switches that felt like they weren't working properly. Because this machine was out in the weather for who knows how long, they were ceased up a bit, and the little ball bearing on top of the toggle inside had popped off. Thanks for the advice.
@@johnb5519 I had a 7070 some years ago. Cool receiver. Loved the auto tune feature. Another of those wish I hadn't sold it units.
@@johnhornsby7578 Yes, the auto tune feature is nice. The fm is all garbled, but the tuner automatically locks on to stations just fine, and the stereo light comes on, so I suspect something on the mpx board to be bad.
Absolutely a keeper! 🗿🎸
I would use a vacuum cleaner, an old tooth brush, and some compressed air to get Rid of the Dust and Dirt!!
CRC make an electrical contact cleaner.
For some music small systems just Do NOT cut it, most Rock bands still use valve amps because they sound GOOD man, just do NOT let them too warm!!!!
A couple of years ago power company had been working out in the street, when they turned on the power again a large power surge blew my amp bastards $400 damage killed the amp, eventually i found a suitable amp to run my speakers!!
My first receiver was a Marantz Gyrotuner bought in high school with my money from a dishwashing job I still have it best purchase ever! Thanks for posting this great video!
treat all frame and metal work with Bullfrog. wipe front frame panel and shafts with cloth/wd-40 , spray down bottom of circuit boards with deoxit d-5 and tilt to drain off. protects old unit from corrosion. spray down rear panel with wd and wipe down everything. tighten all screws and boards gently .
A gem. After cleaning it will be right near to new. I remember getting excited over my first Marantz which was bought through money earned on a paper route. I believe it was a 2035. My younger brother has hadn't a number of years.
Always enjoy your videos! Love seeing how you diagnose the problem and correct it. Also, the fact that these beautiful stereos are saved from the scape pile.
Ive got one of those in my shop its been there for 30 years and still rocking the shop.
These vintage receivers create a mysterious warm full sound that modern rec cannot. Also Deoxit is a MUST!
I use to take apart all my electronics when I was a kid 8-15 I’m 70 love it and sometimes I still do it.
Once I found Akai AA8080 1972 or 1974. By the time I found it it was 40 years old. I took it home, plugged in power socket and turn it on. First I heard crackles and low frequency hum, but nothing burnt. So I decided to leave it turned on for a couple of hours. When I returned to receiver, it was silent. I thought it died, but no, it was alive and worked like new. Capacitors got full charge and restored their capacitance, so I didn't need any repair or restorations except buying new knobs.
Second time I looked inside receiver was 6 years later when a couple of capacitors started degrading so I replaced them. So it still works and give me joy!
Now it is about 50 years old and it feels and works fine.
Scored a 2220B with wood sleeve out of the metal recycling hopper at work 13years ago. Plugged it in w/out speakers -no dial lights. Rolled the tuner knob until it landed on a strong FM station, and the Orange stereo light lit up, so I knew then it was worth cleaning up and checking out further. It ended up needing only only new array of lights behind the dial. 🏆
Still using it regularly!
A acquaintance of mine told me he knew a old man that sold random stuff at a swap meet . The old man sold him a tube McIntosh 275 for 80 bucks , the old man told the guy they were scrapping a bunch of old tube junk at the recycling plant like nothing . This back in 2007.
@@savagedick1462 Whorry chit! 😳
Nice !!
I’m 70 years old and appreciate a Marantz like that.
I think you do too.
Best 😅
I have a Marantz 4100 quad receiver that I have not used for 30 years and a thorens turntable that will need a new belt and maybe a new needle I would like to sell to someone who will appreciate it and use it more than I have
If your guy had it in a shop, he was blowing it out with compressed air periodically. If you look at the areas that had dust build up, it was areas that the air nozzle couldn't get to. The outer shell doesn't have openings there? Either way, awesome find.
What a great find, and not a whole lot to do to get it sounding good again. Love the cats in the last few videos! Just like mine; they have to be in the middle of everything! Great to see you working on Hi-Fi equipment again. Looking forward to more in upcoming videos.
Love the cats
Another good video ! recommend leaving the ratchet handle in the toolbox & using a 1/4" drive handle instead, less chance of "over-torquing" "snug" is the proper torque spec.there. also, after blasting the tuning air capacitor clean, notice that there are two little bearings on the air capacitor shaft that I feel should get a drop of fine lube. as a Mechanic myself, I like all moving surfaces to have a bit-o-lube ..... look forward to more repair videos .. cheers
Got that exact model from one of my clients when she was moving. It sat for along time so I took it in an had all the pots and switches cleaned. Got it hooked up to my Scott quadrant 101s and Pioneer HPM 100 speakers. It literally shakes the house. Blows away my Sony receiver I have in the living room.
What a find! It's amazing what people have stored that is a treasure to others. Nice descriptive analysis and process for bringing it back to life.
I also wonder what are destroyed in floods, hurricanes and tornadoes.
I bought a refurbished Marantz 2226 in 2007. Cleaned and r re-capped. Sounds great!
got that one at home, also a 2225 Receiver both in a woodcase, so nice
Saul Marantz created fantastic audio products.
I love seeing old stuff like this brought back to life!!!
I used to sell and service Marantz. They were great!! Very nostalgic watching you. The biggest problem I had on the early 70's models was when the push button switches were made with silver plated contacts. They were constantly tarnishing on seldom used buttons. Luckily they changed the design, but it was a pain going through and changing them. 🙂
wow it was like you read my mind sir, as a customer, I have but the contacts are just terrible sometimes, I have to use toothpicks to bind up the side of the button just enough to where they make contact. 🙄🤔😏😬
Still running a 2220 I bought in '73. Love the warm sound these old Marantz put out.
My wife, a front-end manager at a thrift store brought home a Marantz 4230 quad receiver that she paid the store $30 dollars for . Hooked it up and works perfectly. I announced a $300 dollar bounty to the donation guys if they get in a Pioneer 1280 and hold it out for her and a $500 bounty for a Pioneer 1980 receiver.
They have also been offered bounties for anything McIntosh.
Excellent... I like your cautious start - up procedure, the cat, and that receiver is too cool for words!!!!
Excellent video. You are a great presenter and clearly explain what you're doing. That receiver reminds me of the stuff coming out when I was in high school that I dreamed of owning, but was too expensive for me.
I loved your cats, too!
You're in for a real treat if you ever get hold of vintage Stereo equipment
My wife and I had a stereo receiver that looked just like that. We bought it around 1982. It was awesome. The tuner looked so cool. . Not sure if it was the same model. The volume control wore out and had dead spots and I couldn't get a new part and cleaning it didn't help. I was a stereo tech for a couple years. I might still have it in the basement for someone to find some day. They don't make them so pretty anymore.
Took old magazine off my Pioneer SX780 & hooked up my old Pioneer 518 turntable. After 22 years plays old 70’s Fleetwood Mac records great. What a lucky find for you
Great video. I have a 2215 that I bought in 1976. Glad to see that this cleaning job is so easy! Thanks.
I’m not sure if you’ve already done this, but I’d love a tutorial on what kind of cleaner works best for various types of controls. I thought Deoxit D5 was the go-to contact cleaner for just about everything. But, apparently that’s not correct. Thanks.
AH does have a vid about the different cleaners. I do not remember title.
Hi I believe the fur on the heat sinks is from cigarette smoke (nicotine oil and dust) collecting on heated surfaces, I've seen this many times on TV sets in the 60's while I was servicing them
Rich
Back in the 70's I was heavy into stereo systems had a few Marantz receivers, 2010,2220, and my favorite of all 2245 Great units!!
WOW!!!
Those were sold in every "department store" (Macy, Sears, Nordstrom, Gimbles, Service Merchandise, etc ) sold these stereo systems known as "rack units". Each came with a cabinet with four or five shelves, between two and four components (turntable, cassette player, amplifier, equalizer, tuner, etc.) and a hefty pair of speakers and as you can see they "looked" powerful. Almost everyone had one in their home in the 80's, they were as popular as flat panel TV's are now. They ranged between 200 to 400watts per unit and while they were more than enough for residential use they weren't even a fraction as powerful as they look.
Great Find, thanks for the blast from the past...
Nice shout out to XrayTony. I’ve seen that video 😀
Back in the day (1987) when I was taking an electrics class I repaired a Marantz amplifier for the school library. I did it on my own, it wasn't a class project. I did buy the output transistors as well as the transistors for 2 stages before the output transistors. It takes me back more than a few years.
I own a 2265 that's 45 years old and it still works. It's my number one receiver, 65 watts.
Nice 2226!!! She's definitely clean!
Happy belated Thanksgiving!!
Every cat I know has the qualities of an inspector. Love this Marantz, they were not marketed as well as other receivers in Canada, hence one of these gets this Canuck quite excited.
I got a small am/fm radio going with regular wd40 - sprayed all the switches and pots and the thing works perfectly now. It was an experiment and seems okay. Love this 2226 and dont remember seeing these. I had a new 2230 back in the day. Great receiver. Ran some RS Nova 3 ways speakers with it. What a find.
I have one, bought in 1977. I was 15. I still use it.
That's one of the best stereo amps from the 70s had one!!! That's when music was good!!!
very nice find, fix and lovely cats
Your video was interesting to watch, I have the exact same unit in perfect working order, I run a cassette player, turntable and four speakers. The sound and performance are exceptional for its age. Thank you for sharing!!
You're a very lucky guy!!! It´s very hard to find a unit in this condition these days!!! Congratulations for the find and video!!!
Word!
whats your problem? I have same I purchased brand new, still works perfect and no one has ever touched or repaired it. Puts out some good vibes.
Marantz silver series rocks. I have a 2230B that I bought new back when I was in high school in the 80s, and it still sounds incredible. Cool find.
My first receiver was from Radio Shack a Realistic Tandy 500...I bought it in 1971 when I was in Jr. High 8 grade...👍
You said ; That we can't hear what you can . Your microphone are very good . I can hear everything like I'm in there . That amp is a capsule time . Remarcable !
Excellent video. My Marantz 2220b cut out sometimes when I play record or reel to reel on one channel. I notice it doesn't cut out when I played the radio. They sure are nice looking receivers!
I definitely must say that the old style stainless steel brushed aluminum finish on these older units we're a lot stronger and a lot more capable of doing much greater things than some of the new digital stuff
Your love for the tech that powered my youthful love of rock is so cool.
What a satisfying video! I feel all warm and fuzzy.
I was 20 years old when that receiver came out. Memories.
I still have a Sherwood S-9910 and a Marantz 2385 sitting in my basement from the good ole' days. Currently I'm pushing a set of Cornerhorns with a Phase linear 400 and my daughter just had a meltdown for a Pioneer direct drive turntable she wanted for her vinyl collection. Funny what was old is new again, glad I hung on to my old equipment. thanks for the video.
What cornerhorns sir?
The problem I find with sheet metal screws are all the little metal bits that fall onto the circuit board. I clean the bits off when taken apart, but when reassembling I can only hope that nothing shorts out. It's totally bad practice to use such screws and I see it all too often, even on units costing several thousand dollars.
Very nice! Now I'm even more inspired to dig out my old SR8010 and repair the power supply.
Wish me better luck than I had the first time I tried!
Nice unit. I have a 2238B that was given to me still in the original box. I'm sure it needs a full recap and tune but cosmetically it is beautiful.
Sooo.... distracted by the kitty cat!!! 🤣 That receiver is a find! You don't see many models with a midrange control. 👍😁
Boy does that bring back memories!
You sir are the maker of awesome content.
I enjoy watching this video because i bought my Marantz in 1979 I enjoy how mush power it put out with my HPM 100 speakers
Marranz is a great hi fi brand. I have been many years listening my CDs on my Marranz Cd player and still going strong
I have one in my basement, it’s been there for 35 years, moved and never set it up! Not sure of the model, I’ll have to look. I’ve thought about it over the years, it was my dream stereo when I was a young man.
Great video. Looks Mint. Way to deliver a solid vid !!!
Those wafer switches can be a huge PITA. Before I give up on bad ones and pull them out.....I use a little metal polish on pipecleaner and poke it in and turn it around with my drill on a very low speed and lowest torque setting. Flush with 99.9 ipa and a few fresh pipe cleaners....the hit it with some flavour of preserve it. It has never failed me, but exercise extreme caution and work gently. I hate risking FUBAR pulling it all apart and de / re soldering the million pins.
I work at a PC recycling center. You wouldn't believe all the old stereo equipment we get. Sadly it all gets destroyed... My boss has let me have a few pieces, but after I got a couple of Kenwoods (KR 7600 & KR 4070), a Marantz 2245, and a Sansui Six, he cut me off. I'm trying to convince him to let me do "trade-ins", if/when better pieces come in. Lol
Also got a Technics RS 630 TUS cassette deck & a Peavey UMA 150t II amp/mixer, and a complete Bose AV 3-2-1 III set up with 2 extra sattelites and the remote. (Had to search through 1800 pounds of wire, to find the $75 link cable.) I don't even own a TV. Lol
I used to be a DJ and my boss insisted I take a pair of Yamaha MGP32X mixers, we got from a local college. I cleaned them up, got them working properly and donated them to a couple of churches.
Edit: Spellchecker got me.
I use CRC QD contact cleaner on pots and then follow it up with some lube. There may be better ways but it seems to work well for me.
Thanks for the great video! I have a 2226B that I have restored myself. Everything went well but the FM tuner needs alignment. I haven't started that's since you need a signal generator and a scope for that which I don't have. If you would be so kind demonstrate how it's done I'd definitely work up courage to invest in the instruments. But without a clear guide I'm a bit afraid :)
That's a loverly bit of kit, it just needs a bit of love and i would expect it work for years more.
I have an old pioneer SA 706 amp, it was found sitting on top of a dust bin, just waiting for the rubbish collection men to take it.
Lucky for me a friend saw it and it ended up at my house.
The mains power switch had failed, that's the reason it was on the dust bin.
That would have been a shame.
I was going to say ' XRayTony B is great, you might like his repairs'
Sorry waffle mode lol.
I have one of this ,and I’m still using it !and you know what!this thing is monster especially when you match the speaker on it bro,this is gyro tuning for fm,I believe this amplifier is 250 watts per channel,,,I suggest to add equalizer on it so you can hear the sound quality,,,
Great find and good job👍👍 A good cleaning is usually mandatory, then the repairs if needed but you know this. Looks like a new unit now, will make someone very happy...you? Power ratings are usually conservative, just insurance I suspect. Thanks for another enjoyable video, furry helpers a plus.
This video brought back a lot of great memories. My parents had a Marantz Receiver similar to this one back in the early ‘80s.
I remember the first time I adjusted the weighted tuning dial as it just felt “expensive” unlike a a tuning knob from anything else I used before, It also power to drive these large 3 way Acoustic Research speakers with real bass.
That stereo system sounded amazing! Hard to believe that was like 40 years ago.
Am so happy I found your channel. Please keep the content coming. Bravo to you!
Enjoy your videos, if my Dad was still with is he would love watching all your videos. Thank you.
1:34 aww puddycat 😊cars come first! Dang! It's night and day inside!
Awesome job! It's great to see how well that Marantz 2226 survived over the years. I have four Marantz receivers with my favourite being my Marantz 2270 and aside from their excellent sound reproduction, visually they are so stunning. :)
Last year I had my 2270 rebuilt by a guy in Kitchener. Cost $750 and well worth it. It’s near 50 years old and in mint. Still have the original bill too….from Bay/Bloor radio! $699! The days when we lived pay cheque to pay cheque lol. Also recently rebuilt 4 large Advent Speakers (the ones with the beveled edge). And paired everything up with my Thorens TD 160. Love vinyl! I wish that I knew what I know now. When I was younger! Ooh La La
Wow, what a great find, you can say it's on the low end but I know a maranze that fell 2 stories in a house fire, was soaked by the fire department and still played,
I heard that story before, amazing! I also know of one that worked after going through a carwash! ;)
Back in the late 50s, I got interested in receivers. Transistorized was just beginning to come on the market. So, instead of a tubed Fisher receiver, I got an transistorized one. I still have the receiver, but, now I wished that I had gotten the tubed model. The sound is much warmer and fuller than the one with transistors.
You’ve got the best. Now hang on to it. I have a Marantz stereo like it they are wonderful.
I still have my dads marantz 2226 in storage and it too suffers from the same issue with the volume pot picking up interference in its sweep! I thought it might be an issue with leaking capacitors but your video has shown me that it may just need a refurbishment! Thank you for this video; you've got my like!
In Sweden you find these kinds of amplifiers in the garbage rooms pretty often,found a Pioneer SA-7800 a while back,needs some love but it´s working
Fantastic! Pure stereo clear sound. The two way hi-fi stereo system is good for awakening and enlightenment.
I have a Sansui 2000a in the wood shop, it’s been there for over 15 years. In the summertime it gets full of sawdust and then it thermally shuts off.
Grandpa had good taste in receivers. I wish that contact cleaner trick would work on the tuning caps I have on the type of radios that I work on, but usually they're just so dirty that I remove them and put them in the ultrasonic cleaner, then re-lube their bearings when I re-install them with new rubber isolation washers as the old ones have usually turned into hard little pucks.
I enjoy the great content of your channel. I am a technician from germany, came to your channel because of the maranz stuff.
I love repairing old vintage audio as well as working with old motorcycles.
You make a great job in explaining! I think everyone can learn something, no matter if he/she is a professonal or not.
Even your car-content is great! I always hesitate buing any old car because they are consumpting a lot of money time and space.
Might be better stay with the tiny motocycles and elecronic stuff!
But a cat is really missing in my household :D
I bought one today, will have it next week, a lot of cleaning to do 🤭 but one thing i don't get watching your video... why not first remove all the dust and then use the Deoxit, now all the dust slips inside the potmeters, sliders etc. 🤨but further of all a nice video 🍻
Now I want to see that receiver hooked up to those big Altec Lansing studio monitors after you rebuild them. The cats help you diagnose the problems. Lol
That’s a flywheel tuning dial your moving .. 1 flick of finger will send station finder clear across the whole front panel really fast , nice find…
That's gold for an audiophile!!
I liked how he made the cat reappear. That was awesome.
My sister had that exact model Marantz back in the day. I had a Pioneer model SX 780 with a whopping 45 watts per channel.
I regularly play a Fischer studio standard from the seventies that I got from my son in laws friend that his father had put in the basement in a thick cardboard box for many years. I connect a pair of pristine Sansui speakers from 1980 I bought for $14.00
At a thrift store. I know nothing about audio but it sounds so deep and rich and my friends from the seventies are transported
Back to the house parties we used to have back in the day.
Nice video mate, I used to have a Marantz full system in the 80's I got rid when CD's came out. Always wished I had kept it a superb system and sounds.
I currently have the model 2235B in my man cave. In Florida that's a garage. It is doing the same things as the one you just cleaned up. I believe I could clean it the same way you just did. And I need at least 3 bulbs. I sure would like to get this thing rocking again. Where do I get the bulbs. I don't think Radio Shack is in business any more. I didn't know how to clean the controls and you just showed me how! I bought that unit new in 1975. Along with the model 6200 belt drive turntable. I am inspired to get that receiver sounding clean again. Thanks I liked and subscribed!
Beauty, not many watts but big sound!