It always amazes me the amount of vested interest people take in equipment that’s not their own. If you don’t own it, don’t worry about it. If you own it, do what you want to it.
I had the PS 10 and found a,pair of the PS 8.You have to check out the woofers ,they rot out and you have to take off the bottoms to check them out.I had them on Stands .Used the 10s in the 80s.
Glad you’re reviewing an Onkyo receiver. This excellent brand often slips under the radar. I’ve owned quite a few vintage receivers, Pioneer, Yamaha, and Sansui. I bought new, and have kept my late 70’s Onkyo TX7000, 90 watt per channel model. Sold all the previous brands, and replaced them with the Onkyo. This particular model is the total package: possessing a powerful, dynamic, amplifier, state of the art digital tuner, excellent build quality, and extremely attractive appearance. Great product!
The best tuners were on the tx4500 mk2 and above models..they had quartz lock tuning..the tx1500mk2 and the tx2500mk2 had the servo lock tuner. The tuners were discrete and best there was. The later ones with ic tuners (hitachi) werent as good..only cheaper to build..
The specification sheet for the TX7000 indicates that it’s tuner is Quartz Locked with a digital display, and has the Super Servo feature. Another unique feature on this model are the heat pipes which are used to cool the hefty power output of this amp. The receiver always remains cool even when I push it.
@@BobO-ps1py the quarts lock or servo lock are both types of phase lock loop circuit designs.. that is actually sepperate from the actual tuner..the original tuner capacitor is a big square with fins and a round knob that turns it on the side. After that they used ic chip to eluminate almost 50 parts..if its digital tuning..its not discreet with a variable cap..the heatsink improvement is advancement i agree. I repair audio for a living..
Just love my Luxman R-1040. Picked it up from a thrift store (charity shop here in the UK) for £30. And well, the sound is just gorgeous; valve-like without the valves. I keep promising my wife that I'll sell the beast one day, but everytime I consider selling, I put it on, listen to it and change my mind. All the best Ian, Birmingham, UK
Dear Mrs. Kafkaian , Please don't let Ian sell his Luxman . You don't see those much in certain parts of the world. They're rare here in the states...once it's gone , there'll never be another. Thanks. Big City, Colorado,USA.
I have a 1050 that's in perfect condition except the packing it came in wasn't ideal and one side panel of the cabinet separated. Need to get that fixed someday. I had an 1120 years ago, but it was "too much" and I traded it to someone who wanted the specialized output for electrostatic speakers. In trade I got mint-condition JVC JA-S55 amp and matching JT-V22 tuner, plus some other pieces I don't remember now. I also got, and still have, a Luxman R-1500, in the original box, 220v from Europe.
A friend in high school had the PS-10s hooked to a Fisher Studio Standard amp. It was one of the best systems anyone I knew had. The down firing woofer was insane. Would have been from 1984-1985.
I got a nice Onkyo integrated amp, 80w/channel, one of the early 90s with the odd tone controls with ‘contrabass’ that I can’t understand. I only have a pair of Klipsch Heresy speakers, no sub woofer. Sounds great for records and cds.
I have the Akai AA- 1150 and it sounds awesome. I highly recommend it as a real value. This from a man that also owns a Marantz 2230 and a 2275. The extra light and color idea is excellent. I'll have to investigate that.
Cool video, and the LEDs are a big improvement, especially in the Akai wrap around window. I think those Design Acoustics speakers look very neat and I would love to play with a pair.
I had one of those Fisher receivers but it was the Sears by fisher model. It was in mint condition and not bad sounding. I had a guy buy it off me for his office. Thanks for doing a video on these. Seems like everyone is always doing videos on the top end recievers and never give the smaller ones any time.
PS-10’s were designed to fit right in the shelf with your record albums. So no surprise that they were better behaved on the workbench. 90db at 8 ohms make them an ideal match for lower power gear. The PS-8 was equally efficient. Check out the D-12, a 12 sided ‘70s icon.
When I saw "Design Acoustics", the first thing my mind went to was the D-12s. Those were just so much fun. Right up there with the Klipshorn in terms of taking over your room. But who am I to talk? I have MG-IIIs in my den now!
It's so fun to see these and remember which retail stores carried each brand. The local RCA store had JVC, a sewing store had Fisher, and a wicked lady owned a store that had Kenwood and Sansui. I'm sure she wasn't wicked.. she was just sick and tired of us coming in to turn all the knobs. It did tarnish Sansui for me though. My first REAL store experience was Audio Labs in Des Moines. Heaven.
A Sherwood S-7100A is one of my go-to receivers. These slightly earlier models had great build quality…real walnut case, good power supply, etc. They look very handsome sitting on the shelf. They had a fairly “aggressive” loudness curve which definitely puts their sound on the warm side of things, I’d highly recommend trying one out if you get a chance.
The Sherwood is really tidy inside. Fishers were all the rage in the 80’s. As an Onkyo TX 4500MKII owner I’m gutted to find out it’s an empty box. My Sunday morning is now complete.
The Onkyo and Design Acoustic set up reminds me of my childhood. Dad surprised us when he brought that setup home from the local stereo shop, Wall to Wall Sound if I remember correctly. I couldn’t count the number of hours spent listening but it sparked a love for music and equipment I still have. Thanks for the memory. I think someone mentioned it but the speakers were meant to set in a bookshelf. They sound much better there than out in the open.
I always thought the illuminated window around the tuning knob on the Akai receiver looked pretty cool... and looks much better since you added a lamp. Nothing wrong with any of the receivers you showed here, all are adequate for most people's needs
I think the STANDARD on all tune ups should be LEDs, Banana 5 point binding posts, power supply and filter recap and I even like to get a detachable power cable that is maybe a little more robust than what they had from the factory. It's kind of like taking an old mustang and doing all the upgrades and now you have something that's faster than the modern version.
Only thing I noticed about the Sherwood is what I did NOT notice. Usually the main filter caps are the most noticeable objects in a 70's receiver. The main filter caps in the Sherwood are so tiny I did not see them immediately. The Fisher was trying mighty hard, I'd say 7 out of 10 to rock a Marantz silver receiver look. I had a Onkyo TX 8500 MKII that I loved but I traded it for another Pioneer SX-1250 so now I have 2. I loved that AKAI upgrade full orange around the knob look! Gave it a fresh 21st century vibe! Maybe I am DEAD WRONG here but my first receiver in college was a cheap Sanyo 2033 @ just 33 watts per channel. My Sleeper Sanyo 2033 receiver was a tank. She endured 15 years of everyday use without anything breaking.
I'm loving my Onkyo tx2500 Mkii. I picked it up for $80 about 9 years ago. Really like the blue LEDs effect. Something to think about. Funny that I always thought the knobs felt meh sorta cheap, and that was your comment as well. My speakers I bought in the mid 80s from the nice audio store in Knoxville TN. engineering dynamics encore model 7. They were having a sale, buy one get two, which put them in my price level. Still a big buy for me at the time! Hate the vinyl wrap, but they sound great to me. I've never been able to find any info about the speakers. Nice to see the inside of the Onkyo... Enjoying the channel, nice vibe, appreciate the knowledgeable humble tone.
As someone from the UK, I am scratching my head with the US fascination with receivers. For me, the natural progression from the basic, fully all-in-one music centre with amp+tuner+turntable+tape, was towards separate components - amplifier (pre+power for the well heeled), turntable, tape deck, only occasionally a tuner. All the big brands that released receivers in the US (Pioneer, Technics, Sony, ...) were available in UK stores, but I don't remember there ever being a market for receivers. Certainly not the big, flashy, knob encumbered, light shows that are such a feature on this channel. My follow up question would then be, what did the serious US audio listener progress to when they outgrew receivers? What vintage US gear is the equivalent of a NAD 3020, a Mission Cyrus One, Musical Fidelity A1, or for those with money - QUAD, NAIM etc.
My impression is that, in the 80s, an audiophile might have progressed to Harman-Kardon, McIntosh, or higher-end Marantz separates (Marantz started out a US-based company that built some pieces in the US, but transitioned to Japanese manufacturing by the 80s). But all the brands you mention were (and are) also available in the US, so people could also get into NAD, Cambridge Audio, and so-on if they had the money.
@@JustinRoby9311 by the 1980s, there was a shift to affordable separates by a lot of people who weren't at the McIntosh level. Adcom was one of the more popular U.S. brands. (The name was short for "add commission" because those who created it thought they'd be a good way of putting more money in the pockets of salespeople -- at least that's the story). But another American brand, Hafler, had been around for a while, and there were plenty of other U.S. manufacturers of separates: Conrad-Johnson, Audio Research, B&K, Krell, PS Audio, etc. I would speculate that people realized they didn't need to depend on FM radio for their music as much, once cassette tapes improved in quality and they could borrow someone's albums to create a "mix tape." Also, the Boomers who bought receivers for their college dorm rooms in the '70s were making enough money by the '80s to buy better gear for their homes. But once home theater products entered the scene, everything shifted again, as the 5.1-channel AV receivers became the audio focal point. That pretty much wiped out the small shops that focused on affordable two-channel sound exclusively.
LEDs have such a narrow band a light and are usually much brighter than the incandescents they replace. Incandescents radiate a broad band of visible light frequencies that give a much warmer look, no matter the color. Yeah, it's a personal choice but I think LEDs can look cheap unless gels/colored plastics are used to more closely replicate how incandescents look.
Most installations I've seen are by people that don't really understand LED as an electronic component and how to tune them to the application properly. The intensity can easily be brought down with a resistor, and by playing with different resistance values can approximate (within a reasonable ballpark) the intensity of the original lamps. It's the **FLICKER** most people really don't understand or address. I've only seen one YT video so far where a truly knowledgable person addressed that by doubling the LED's with the second ones mounted in the inverse polarity in an attempt to balance out the flicker.
I do not understand why someone would get upset about LED lights being installed. If someone buys the receiver, that person can change the lights. LED lights look good, use less electricity, and are cooler.
My Onkyo TX 2500 MKII has the stock golden lights...and dam she's pretty. My Onkyo TX- 4500 has the blue LED's...I liked 'em , then felt like I did a terrible trashy thing, but now i'm back to liking them, and the issue is over - I have the best of both worlds. The 2500 is pretty good stereo, but the 4500 is an exceptional stereo, and you don't need to go further up to the 6500 or 8500...they're just big beasts with super high price tags. (but they look cool). The original TX-4500 was built with every component top notch - it saved the company. (long story)...but I want to thank everyone in Iowa for finally throwing in some Onkyo love...was feeling like a lost step child out here. P.S. - It's not smoked plastic on the fronts - it's smoked glass.
I had an Onkyo tx2500 mk II for a short period of time and I thought is was an excellent sounding unit.Much better than quite a few receivers I have owned.Also have an Sears Audio by Fisher which I think is their totl model and it sounds fantastic.I have moved on from 70s receivers as my main units for the most part but that Fisher and a Sony 7065 are more than likely my life keeper receivers.The blue leds look terrible in Marantz and Pioneer receivers.
There's a massive difference between Sherwood of the 70"s/early 80's vs the later stuff. The fisher up to mid 70's was much, much different than the Fisher of the late 70's through the 80's. On much of this equipment manufacture date means much more than the name.
Sherwood used to make high quality stuff in the early 60s, like stromberg carlson quality, and I've seen separate system from sherwood, it looked like it was quality stuff.
Good to see you finally show Sherwood some love. Back in the mid 1970s, when I was in college, I had a side hustle selling HiFi equipment. Before I left for my freshman year in college I bought myself a Sherwood S-7100. I ended up buying and reselling units I bought from the legendary Disco Electronics on Route 22 in Springfield, New Jersey. I'd buy them for $135, sell them to my classmates for $180. Back in 1973 to 1975, I had to have sold more than two dozen S-7100s and S7100As. I still have one and it still works flawlessly, 50 years later. So much better than the comparably priced Pioneer SX-424. Anyone reading this that lived in New Jersey in the 1960s to the early 2000s remember Joe and Pat behind the counter at Disco Electronics?
@@ericschwartzberg5083I know that Livingston was not really close to Springfield (no highway to get there), do you remember Disco on Route 22? It was next to JMK BMW just eat of the bowling alley. It was kind of a hole-in-the-wall place but in the era of fair trade retail price fixing, it was a place where you could do an end run. Thanks for responding to my initial post.
I had one sherwood amp s 7200? it was the same as the sears am 4358 inside. I also had an audio reflex that was also the same internally. the sears amp is in a heavier enclosure but same back plate and circiut prtection and prefomance as the sears/audio reflex(jc penny?). They all sound the same in direct and can be conected together. idk if the sx 424 pioneer had pre out and main in./ direct/slave amp function. I feel that pioneer BIG OLD 1010,1250,1980.SPEC,AND SA GEAR IS GOOD BUT OVERPRICED. Is a bryston amp overpriced at $1000 in comparison to a $5000 pioneer 1250.? are we just talking $5000 for looks...do people know about the pioneer vsa9500 from the 90s made in japan. the one with the dual power tansforms and honeycomb heatsink. It has a remote control and it is way more dynamic. it looks like a pos vsx elite pioneer with black aluminium face and gold letters. dont be fooled these models will impress you. these amps are like a fast NAD but with accurate bass control and quicker dynamics.
Hey from Australia. I bought an ONKYO 7.1 surround amplifier which is equipped with "THX" certification. Thanks George. Seriously it is a great amplifier. ONKYO made Quadraphonic units in the 70s with CD 4 discrete sound. WOW. I just sprayed my boxers. It never took off. A lot of people in the business are calling Dolby Atmos the 2020 version of CD 4 discrete. I don't know anyone who is running it unless they have lots of cash. The audio quality these days is great and I can't be bothered adding another 2 channels. In Star Trek First Contact, the audio steering is excellent to the point of why bother with 9.1 surround? All my Blu-ray discs sound phenominal and I had to install a DBX 163 to catch the transients going to the subs. As I'm a young 63, these amplifiers your showing here are just as brilliant as they were when released and after a recap, still sound as good if not better than some crap released today. Cheers. Andrew Collins. Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Have you ever considered a video on some of the sleeper receivers which were sold in Europe in the 1970s ? (although many have made it to North America over the years, because they have adjustable input voltage). I have a few from Schaub-Lorenz, Philips, Nordmende, and one of the best is a Telefunken Opus 7050 HiFi, which has the typical wide, low black face Euro styling with green multiband dial scale. The tuner is incredible for selectivity and sensitivity, and the amplifier is clean and powerful, maybe 50 W / Ch.
Another great video. Sony receivers from the 70’s seem like great value to me. I’ve got a couple - an STR 6065 and an STR 7045 that I paid a total of $300 for. Both work flawlessly and they look and sound great.
I got one Onkyo TX 2500 MKII. Sounds really good. In fact my 12 year old stopped me from selling. I then realized how good it sounds. Hooked up to a technics SL D303 turntable, AKai CS -F39R cassette player and a Sony CD player. JBL LX44 speakers. All vintage setup. Except the CD.
I own several Onkyo MKII’s from the 1500 thru the 6500, still waiting to score a 8500. I think they’re one of the best looking receivers out there short a Sansui G series. And they do use glass and not plastic. .
Love my Onkyo 4500 MK II. It has served my well. Only problem is the tuner pointer has gotten off the numbers. I had it fixed once but happened again. I never listen to the radio anymore so no problem!
Have an Onkyo TX-4500 MKII and love it. Just be very careful when you clean the faceplate on these. If you use something harsh it will take all numbers and letters off of it
10:07 I have the TX-4500 MKII but I think it had a problem the last time I tried listening to it. Not sure if it’s a major problem but I’m going to try it again now that I’ve seen you review the series. Definitely gonna hang on to it and hopefully it can be repaired. Speaking of which, would it be worth the price to ship it to you for an evaluation and repair if needed?? Oops, nevermind, just read your channel description that you do not accept anything but walk-in patronage. Bummer!
Hi Kevin, That Onkyo series is outstanding, I picked up a 2500 MKII at a garage sale for $30 about 7 years ago and was instantly a fan. What an under the radar gem. The 4500 and 6500 is the same with more power. The Sherwood that is never talked about is the S9110. 110 watts with phenomenal features and sound
@@skylabsaudio I ran into you at Axpona on Thursday night. We were talking about the JBL 4311. When I make the trip to stop by your place, I’ll bring my S9110 to you to service
If you end up with any mid to late 70's HH Scott Receivers in the shop for service, I would definitely take a look at them for a potential add to your sleeper list. The ones I have had experience with have been pretty solid units. The designs of the early to mid 70's units are a little plain in my eyes, while the later 70's units really took it up a notch in my opinion. In any case, great video. 👍
I can only suggest that you get a receiver big enough to have the features you want. Power switch (Pioneer), Speaker outputs, inputs, look. The wattage is not important, to me, since I can hear my Genesis G2+ speakers clearly out in the street with my SX-450. And yes, the SX-450 is the reason for my power switch..uh..phobia. Another fun one, keep them coming!
Good on ya. I have the original TX-4500(non mkII) and my face is smoked glass. He said "smoked plastic" but not my stuff. My 2500mkII is glass also....so maybe just a slip o' the tongue.(?)
I have this one as well, inherited from my father in law who was the original owner. Have the receipts and owners manual. What year was your purchase? I agree, this is one of the best units I've ever owned.
@carternash1384 Hi, I think I purchased it around 1979 or so, I was friends with a local stereo store owner and I had him special order it for me. I think it was around $500 at the time. I would love to have it cleaned out and gone over by a vintage repair shop but I don’t believe there are any in my city, upstate NY. I think a lightbulb may be out, and I’m sure it’s full of dust. But it works fine, needs a blast of dust spray in the volume control every once in a while. Take care.
I sold the design acoustic series back in the 80s. FYI, they were designed for bookshelves. That’s the reason why they sound better or your service bench. Cool stuff, thanks for sharing.👍🏼
I had a Onkyo TX 4500, I put soft white LED in it because I like the look. I ended up flipping it because I had too many stereos. That thing sounded so good. If I see another in the line I’ll grad it in a heartbeat. It sounded incredibly modern. Those are a great deal… great performance for dollar.
Just had my 4500 rebuilt . You can bury me with it. It's cool Kevin has brought out a lot of Onkyo people with this episode. Was starting to feel like the lost stepchild.
When I purchased my 9090 DB , I also purchased a pair of Design Acoustic D-6. The woofer was on the back side and required they be placed 2” from the wall
Another great video! I got a pair of Design Acoustics 9’s. Reformed the base drivers on the bottom and paired them with a Marantz 2245. Have them in a 15’ x 6’ x 3’ built in the wall bookshelf in on old 1910 house. They sound great as bookshelf speakers in a inclosed environment. Look forward to seeing your videos every Sunday morning!
All of those receivers looked great. Especially the Sherwood. I have a 20 watt Marantz 2220b. It has enough power to drive any of my speakers. I installed LED lamps because there was serious heat damage to the plastic lamp housing. Along with a reproduction face plate and new vellum, it looks like a museum piece.
Scott receiver 337 Overseas build Never been touched Still working great Just a banging receiver in it Sounds like a top of the liner One of the receiver lines you just don't hear about But very underrated
I have an Akai 1150 in the garage. Great sound and very reliable. Got it for free, replaced the blown amp transistors and away it went. That was 25 years ago.
A fun video, as always...definitely a fun one. I've been into vintage audio gear for a long time but I just recently discovered the Concept brand. I was so impressed with the Concept 2.5 that I found that I just bought another one. Real wood top covers and veneer and solid builds. This is a brand that's going to be on my radar from now on.
I'm definitely pro-Onkyo. I had a TX-6500 Mk II (100W/Ch). Zero complaints from the day I bought it till the day I sold it. It followed me from home to college and beyond...never complained. I'd get one without giving it a second thought (if I was in the market). While they don't have the following of Pioneer, I'd put them up against Pioneer and other contemporaries. In fact, the TX-6500 Mk II displaced, for me, a Pioneer SX-737 (also a great receiver for what is was). The Onkyo, for most of its life, drove a pair of Cerwin-Vega S1s (so, that is where I was in that part of my life) and then in college, a pair of Altec 604G/620 (aka Model 17)...we had the loudest apartment on campus!
I totally agree. I know it’s hard to believe but I picked up the TX - 6500 MK II at Goodwill for seven dollars about 11 years ago when you could find just about any electronics for cheap. It is a monster. I haven’t had to change caps or anything major since. I took off the vinyl woodgrain and replaced it with walnut veneer. It is connected to Infinity Kappa 7’s and it still sounds fantastic.
@@markmelton9187 I had my TX-4500 checked out when I got it and all was good. I'm just a few years before the MK II's. I used my spare TX 2500 mk II most of the time, because the 4500 was just so exquisite I felt it shouldn't be day to day. So of course, when I decided to pull the 4500 out, a channel had gone down just sitting, so in for a rebuild she went - 3 months.My MK II is a tank and she hasn't needed a thing...but I'm glad I have 4500 set for life (hopefully)...but remember; these old repair guys won't be around forever.
Keep using that orange, on random units! It’s absolutely fabulous that you highlighted that tuning knob! Akai was asleep at the wheel for ignoring it. This is fine work. Keep at it. And, an EDIT: I need you guys to refer someone who can FULLY restore PORTABLES. My two favorites that I adore are the Superscope CRS-2200 from 1978, and the Sansui CP-7 from 1980. I will never, EVER let go of these units. EVEN at their THD levels, when they were Brand New, they were simply Fabulous in their respective performances!
I have a pair of PS-10. They are placement specific. They can sound horrible or amazing depending where you put them and what height.I found the sweet spot on mine and use them with my tube amp and turntable.
Those Sherwood knobs may have been vapor honed as many audio units were in the 70's and 80's. I worked for JCPenney's in 1972 doing private label design for them. They purchased most electronics then from Matsushita in Japan. They sent a couple representatives from Japan to ask me what "Vapor hone" meant. I thought those guys invented it, but they didn't have a clue. It's basically passing the item through an acidic vapor to "etch" the finish. Not speaking English may have been a problem for them. I showed them an elevator door in the building that looked like the finish. They took a picture and a couple weeks later I got a sample that looked right. I suspect that tumbling the part in a slightly abrasive media could get the finish as well. Sorry for the geekish response, but product design was my life for 50 years!
Great Video !!! I am the owner of a fairly obscure receiver. Its a Project One Mark 600. These beasts were distributed by a company called Playback in the Midwest. Gorgeous aluminum faceplate, toggle switches and nice wooden case. Conservatively rated at 60 watts per channel, although i think its a lot more. Marketed to look like a Pioneer receiver. The only weakness they had was their VU meters. Finding one where all of them work is a challenge. Three out of my four VU meters work and my local repair guy just can't fix / repair the fourth one.
Good video, enjoyed it very much. My sleeper is a Realistic STA-95 from 1979. At 45wpc it's not a real powerhouse but it has great sound. Great to listen to but a nightmare to work on.
I picked up a Fisher Studio Standard RS 1015 on ebay this past weekend for 66 dollars with tax 71 dollars and was able to pick it up free so no shipping . Everything works perfect even the tuning meter. Three of the 7 lights work. All will be working after this weekend. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE VIDEO. PS Fisher does make a stereo with only 12 watts.
the Kenwood Model 11s are one of my favorites. maybe not a deep sleeper, but the look of the unit is spectacular. also have every control and input you would want.
Hmmm. In the 70s I kept trading in my equipment. I started the Akai, then Sansui. Finally Onkyo. I should have kept the Sansui. But it was monster to move around all the time as a kid in university who never knew where the next "home" was going to be.
Great Video, thank you. I have an Akai AA1175, which is the next step up from the 1050, with 75 watts / channel into 8 ohms and a mid-range control....sounds lovely.
Absolutely unique content. New subscriber here. An audiophile from the early 80s here. Onkyo and Sony Receiver fan. And in the early 70s, I was the teen who installed 8 speakers in my 68 Impala to go with my quad 8 track. Showing my age here The girl's loved cruising in my car with the stereo on blast. Good times back then😁
The LED’s are a slam dunk for sales. Cool blue is usually number one, they look great in the Pioneer SX- x80 and SX-x50 series receivers. I have an Onkyo 4500 mkii that I was planning to keep incandescent, but the blue in your 2500 has me rethinking that original plan.
I have the original TX-4500 with blue led's and it makes for a dark blue (possibly cuz my smoked glass is - well, smoked.. But, they're easy to change.(on mine). There might be more than one shade of blue, also.
Kevin & crew, I really enjoy these listening sessions! Brings back many memories of sitting in front of my Dad's old Kenwood. That Shurewood looks great with the white LEDs! Really clean! And yes, Fisher was a Sears exclusive brand. The Kenmore of hi-fi's. 👍
How did you get your electronics training? How long would it take for someone starting from scratch to get up and running to confidently repair vintage systems? Your channel is my “go to” on RUclips. I got laid off last July and I’m looking for a new fun career.
Hi Kevin. Thanks for another fun video and thanks for featuring my first receiver that I bought brand new in 1978, the Akai AA-1150. I paid $325 for the receiver in July of 78. By the way it delivers 50 watts into a 8 ohm load. Mine still works and sounds great. The only work it has received is a controls cleaning and LED replacements for the incandescent bulbs. I probably should replace some caps soon.
I have those speakers. Maybe an earlier version. Had to refoam them. I remember it being a little fiddly but not horrible. Very good near-field. Play with toe-in and you can get them to "disappear." Fun and enjoyable, plus those woofers can take a pretty big base hit, so to speak.
As for using different colors of LEDs to light a dial, I did a radio dial that changed color if I select AM or FM. You could use bicolor LEDs for that, or I used the light bar from a document scanner to light the dial. I tapped the AM/FM mode switch to get the power for the different colors. As for other selections like phono aux or such, have the VU meters only lit up.
Hitachi also made some very good and underrated pieces back in the day.
one of my favorite pre and amp with elac speakers all 70´s
I could watch these types of videos all day. Love the quick under the hood reveals, hope you guys keep this going.
Thank you.
That extra light you put in the Akai to illuminate the glass around the tuning knob is a great idea! Looks super stunning!
Thank you!
From boring to special with orange 👍🏻
It always amazes me the amount of vested interest people take in equipment that’s not their own. If you don’t own it, don’t worry about it. If you own it, do what you want to it.
I liked Rotel from the seventies. I had one. Loved it.
That Onkyo has a clean, classy look. I actually prefer the amber lighting. But very cool to see that here.
Classy or glassy? The fronts are smoked glass. I have one in the stock amber(gorgeous) and one in dark blue LED....the best of both worlds.
I have an Onkyo TX-4500 MK2 that I use daily. I can say, it is a big boy receiver.
That was my first receiver, too !
I had the PS 10 and found a,pair of the PS 8.You have to check out the woofers ,they rot out and you have to take off the bottoms to check them out.I had them on Stands .Used the 10s in the 80s.
Warm white LED's are often the conservative approach to keep things looking more original while reducing heat an improving longevity.
I remember those PS-10's and liked the sound but they were a slow seller. Great lighting mod on the Akai AA-1150!
Glad you’re reviewing an Onkyo receiver. This excellent brand often slips under the radar. I’ve owned quite a few vintage receivers, Pioneer, Yamaha, and Sansui. I bought new, and have kept my late 70’s Onkyo TX7000, 90 watt per channel model. Sold all the previous brands, and replaced them with the Onkyo. This particular model is the total package: possessing a powerful, dynamic, amplifier, state of the art digital tuner, excellent build quality, and extremely attractive appearance. Great product!
Let's not forget its outstanding phono stage!
The best tuners were on the tx4500 mk2 and above models..they had quartz lock tuning..the tx1500mk2 and the tx2500mk2 had the servo lock tuner. The tuners were discrete and best there was. The later ones with ic tuners (hitachi) werent as good..only cheaper to build..
The specification sheet for the TX7000 indicates that it’s tuner is Quartz Locked with a digital display, and has the Super Servo feature. Another unique feature on this model are the heat pipes which are used to cool the hefty power output of this amp. The receiver always remains cool even when I push it.
@@BobO-ps1py ill pull up the drawings
@@BobO-ps1py the quarts lock or servo lock are both types of phase lock loop circuit designs.. that is actually sepperate from the actual tuner..the original tuner capacitor is a big square with fins and a round knob that turns it on the side. After that they used ic chip to eluminate almost 50 parts..if its digital tuning..its not discreet with a variable cap..the heatsink improvement is advancement i agree. I repair audio for a living..
Changing the bulbs to led’s in the Onkyo tx2500 cheapened the look of the dial! That color blue was just way wrong for the 2500!
Make people imagine that they use Marantz..🙄
I have an AKAI AA1050....LOVE IT ! so glad you've covered the AA 1150 as in my view anything AKAI are real sleepers
Just love my Luxman R-1040. Picked it up from a thrift store (charity shop here in the UK) for £30. And well, the sound is just gorgeous; valve-like without the valves. I keep promising my wife that I'll sell the beast one day, but everytime I consider selling, I put it on, listen to it and change my mind.
All the best
Ian, Birmingham, UK
Dear Mrs. Kafkaian , Please don't let Ian sell his Luxman . You don't see those much in certain parts of the world. They're rare here in the states...once it's gone , there'll never be another. Thanks. Big City, Colorado,USA.
I have a 1050 that's in perfect condition except the packing it came in wasn't ideal and one side panel of the cabinet separated. Need to get that fixed someday. I had an 1120 years ago, but it was "too much" and I traded it to someone who wanted the specialized output for electrostatic speakers. In trade I got mint-condition JVC JA-S55 amp and matching JT-V22 tuner, plus some other pieces I don't remember now. I also got, and still have, a Luxman R-1500, in the original box, 220v from Europe.
A friend in high school had the PS-10s hooked to a Fisher Studio Standard amp. It was one of the best systems anyone I knew had. The down firing woofer was insane. Would have been from 1984-1985.
My Onkyo is my 2nd or 3rd receiver. It is huge at about 23 inches all around and 7 or 8 inches tall. Heavy as heck too cause it has a metal case.
I had one of those Sherwood receivers, great sound great value!
I got a nice Onkyo integrated amp, 80w/channel, one of the early 90s with the odd tone controls with ‘contrabass’ that I can’t understand. I only have a pair of Klipsch Heresy speakers, no sub woofer. Sounds great for records and cds.
I have the Akai AA- 1150 and it sounds awesome. I highly recommend it as a real value. This from a man that also owns a Marantz 2230 and a 2275. The extra light and color idea is excellent. I'll have to investigate that.
I have an AKAI 1050 and I couldn't agree more, highly underrated !
Cool video, and the LEDs are a big improvement, especially in the Akai wrap around window. I think those Design Acoustics speakers look very neat and I would love to play with a pair.
I had one of those Fisher receivers but it was the Sears by fisher model. It was in mint condition and not bad sounding. I had a guy buy it off me for his office. Thanks for doing a video on these. Seems like everyone is always doing videos on the top end recievers and never give the smaller ones any time.
PS-10’s were designed to fit right in the shelf with your record albums. So no surprise that they were better behaved on the workbench. 90db at 8 ohms make them an ideal match for lower power gear. The PS-8 was equally efficient. Check out the D-12, a 12 sided ‘70s icon.
When I saw "Design Acoustics", the first thing my mind went to was the D-12s. Those were just so much fun. Right up there with the Klipshorn in terms of taking over your room. But who am I to talk? I have MG-IIIs in my den now!
Some very nice sleeper units for sure. Nice job presenting them and walking us through. I like this style of Vintage Audio in the shop.
Loved hearing about those Design Acoustics PS-10 speakers. I'm still using my Design Acoustics PS-55s after decades.
It's so fun to see these and remember which retail stores carried each brand. The local RCA store had JVC, a sewing store had Fisher, and a wicked lady owned a store that had Kenwood and Sansui. I'm sure she wasn't wicked.. she was just sick and tired of us coming in to turn all the knobs. It did tarnish Sansui for me though. My first REAL store experience was Audio Labs in Des Moines. Heaven.
Audio Labs was mine too!
A Sherwood S-7100A is one of my go-to receivers. These slightly earlier models had great build quality…real walnut case, good power supply, etc. They look very handsome sitting on the shelf. They had a fairly “aggressive” loudness curve which definitely puts their sound on the warm side of things, I’d highly recommend trying one out if you get a chance.
Agree. Good choice.
The Sherwood S9110 and HP2000 are the models to get if you can find them.
See the comment I just left. Did you live in New Jersey at the time? Did you buy your S-7100 from Disco Electronics in Springfield?
The Sherwood is really tidy inside. Fishers were all the rage in the 80’s. As an Onkyo TX 4500MKII owner I’m gutted to find out it’s an empty box. My Sunday morning is now complete.
The Onkyo and Design Acoustic set up reminds me of my childhood. Dad surprised us when he brought that setup home from the local stereo shop, Wall to Wall Sound if I remember correctly. I couldn’t count the number of hours spent listening but it sparked a love for music and equipment I still have. Thanks for the memory.
I think someone mentioned it but the speakers were meant to set in a bookshelf. They sound much better there than out in the open.
I always thought the illuminated window around the tuning knob on the Akai receiver looked pretty cool... and looks much better since you added a lamp.
Nothing wrong with any of the receivers you showed here, all are adequate for most people's needs
A teenage friend of mine had an Onkyo receiver. Always thought it was great looking.
I think the STANDARD on all tune ups should be LEDs, Banana 5 point binding posts, power supply and filter recap and I even like to get a detachable power cable that is maybe a little more robust than what they had from the factory. It's kind of like taking an old mustang and doing all the upgrades and now you have something that's faster than the modern version.
Only thing I noticed about the Sherwood is what I did NOT notice. Usually the main filter caps are the most noticeable objects in a 70's receiver. The main filter caps in the Sherwood are so tiny I did not see them immediately. The Fisher was trying mighty hard, I'd say 7 out of 10 to rock a Marantz silver receiver look. I had a Onkyo TX 8500 MKII that I loved but I traded it for another Pioneer SX-1250 so now I have 2. I loved that AKAI upgrade full orange around the knob look! Gave it a fresh 21st century vibe! Maybe I am DEAD WRONG here but my first receiver in college was a cheap Sanyo 2033 @ just 33 watts per channel. My Sleeper Sanyo 2033 receiver was a tank. She endured 15 years of everyday use without anything breaking.
I'm loving my Onkyo tx2500 Mkii. I picked it up for $80 about 9 years ago. Really like the blue LEDs effect. Something to think about. Funny that I always thought the knobs felt meh sorta cheap, and that was your comment as well. My speakers I bought in the mid 80s from the nice audio store in Knoxville TN. engineering dynamics encore model 7. They were having a sale, buy one get two, which put them in my price level. Still a big buy for me at the time! Hate the vinyl wrap, but they sound great to me. I've never been able to find any info about the speakers. Nice to see the inside of the Onkyo... Enjoying the channel, nice vibe, appreciate the knowledgeable humble tone.
I bought that exact model Sherwood receiver 45+ years ago and it still works like a champ.
The lighting mod in that Akai is fabulous!
As someone from the UK, I am scratching my head with the US fascination with receivers. For me, the natural progression from the basic, fully all-in-one music centre with amp+tuner+turntable+tape, was towards separate components - amplifier (pre+power for the well heeled), turntable, tape deck, only occasionally a tuner. All the big brands that released receivers in the US (Pioneer, Technics, Sony, ...) were available in UK stores, but I don't remember there ever being a market for receivers. Certainly not the big, flashy, knob encumbered, light shows that are such a feature on this channel.
My follow up question would then be, what did the serious US audio listener progress to when they outgrew receivers? What vintage US gear is the equivalent of a NAD 3020, a Mission Cyrus One, Musical Fidelity A1, or for those with money - QUAD, NAIM etc.
My impression is that, in the 80s, an audiophile might have progressed to Harman-Kardon, McIntosh, or higher-end Marantz separates (Marantz started out a US-based company that built some pieces in the US, but transitioned to Japanese manufacturing by the 80s). But all the brands you mention were (and are) also available in the US, so people could also get into NAD, Cambridge Audio, and so-on if they had the money.
@@JustinRoby9311 by the 1980s, there was a shift to affordable separates by a lot of people who weren't at the McIntosh level. Adcom was one of the more popular U.S. brands. (The name was short for "add commission" because those who created it thought they'd be a good way of putting more money in the pockets of salespeople -- at least that's the story). But another American brand, Hafler, had been around for a while, and there were plenty of other U.S. manufacturers of separates: Conrad-Johnson, Audio Research, B&K, Krell, PS Audio, etc. I would speculate that people realized they didn't need to depend on FM radio for their music as much, once cassette tapes improved in quality and they could borrow someone's albums to create a "mix tape." Also, the Boomers who bought receivers for their college dorm rooms in the '70s were making enough money by the '80s to buy better gear for their homes. But once home theater products entered the scene, everything shifted again, as the 5.1-channel AV receivers became the audio focal point. That pretty much wiped out the small shops that focused on affordable two-channel sound exclusively.
LEDs have such a narrow band a light and are usually much brighter than the incandescents they replace. Incandescents radiate a broad band of visible light frequencies that give a much warmer look, no matter the color. Yeah, it's a personal choice but I think LEDs can look cheap unless gels/colored plastics are used to more closely replicate how incandescents look.
Most installations I've seen are by people that don't really understand LED as an electronic component and how to tune them to the application properly. The intensity can easily be brought down with a resistor, and by playing with different resistance values can approximate (within a reasonable ballpark) the intensity of the original lamps. It's the **FLICKER** most people really don't understand or address. I've only seen one YT video so far where a truly knowledgable person addressed that by doubling the LED's with the second ones mounted in the inverse polarity in an attempt to balance out the flicker.
LED lighting, takes it up a notch! I love how it looks!
I do not understand why someone would get upset about LED lights being installed. If someone buys the receiver, that person can change the lights.
LED lights look good, use less electricity, and are cooler.
My Onkyo TX 2500 MKII has the stock golden lights...and dam she's pretty. My Onkyo TX- 4500 has the blue LED's...I liked 'em , then felt like I did a terrible trashy thing, but now i'm back to liking them, and the issue is over - I have the best of both worlds. The 2500 is pretty good stereo, but the 4500 is an exceptional stereo, and you don't need to go further up to the 6500 or 8500...they're just big beasts with super high price tags. (but they look cool). The original TX-4500 was built with every component top notch - it saved the company. (long story)...but I want to thank everyone in Iowa for finally throwing in some Onkyo love...was feeling like a lost step child out here. P.S. - It's not smoked plastic on the fronts - it's smoked glass.
I had an Onkyo tx2500 mk II for a short period of time and I thought is was an excellent sounding unit.Much better than quite a few receivers I have owned.Also have an Sears Audio by Fisher which I think is their totl model and it sounds fantastic.I have moved on from 70s receivers as my main units for the most part but that Fisher and a Sony 7065 are more than likely my life keeper receivers.The blue leds look terrible in Marantz and Pioneer receivers.
Kevin, it was great meeting you and Eric the other night in Randy’s room. This was a fun vid. I look forward to more.
Thanks! You too!
There's a massive difference between Sherwood of the 70"s/early 80's vs the later stuff.
The fisher up to mid 70's was much, much different than the Fisher of the late 70's through the 80's. On much of this equipment manufacture date means much more than the name.
Sherwood used to make high quality stuff in the early 60s, like stromberg carlson quality, and I've seen separate system from sherwood, it looked like it was quality stuff.
Good to see you finally show Sherwood some love. Back in the mid 1970s, when I was in college, I had a side hustle selling HiFi equipment. Before I left for my freshman year in college I bought myself a Sherwood S-7100. I ended up buying and reselling units I bought from the legendary Disco Electronics on Route 22 in Springfield, New Jersey. I'd buy them for $135, sell them to my classmates for $180. Back in 1973 to 1975, I had to have sold more than two dozen S-7100s and S7100As. I still have one and it still works flawlessly, 50 years later. So much better than the comparably priced Pioneer SX-424.
Anyone reading this that lived in New Jersey in the 1960s to the early 2000s remember Joe and Pat behind the counter at Disco Electronics?
From Livingston NJ .in the 70s
I owned a Sherwood s 7900 a
The best receiver I ever owned. Now live in Las Vegas and own a s 7100a and a s7225.
@@ericschwartzberg5083 remember the rock on the boarder of livingston and west orange on laurel ave , near rt 10 ...did you ever paint it lol
@@ericschwartzberg5083I know that Livingston was not really close to Springfield (no highway to get there), do you remember Disco on Route 22? It was next to JMK BMW just eat of the bowling alley. It was kind of a hole-in-the-wall place but in the era of fair trade retail price fixing, it was a place where you could do an end run.
Thanks for responding to my initial post.
I had one sherwood amp s 7200? it was the same as the sears am 4358 inside. I also had an audio reflex that was also the same internally. the sears amp is in a heavier enclosure but same back plate and circiut prtection and prefomance as the sears/audio reflex(jc penny?). They all sound the same in direct and can be conected together. idk if the sx 424 pioneer had pre out and main in./ direct/slave amp function. I feel that pioneer BIG OLD 1010,1250,1980.SPEC,AND SA GEAR IS GOOD BUT OVERPRICED. Is a bryston amp overpriced at $1000 in comparison to a $5000 pioneer 1250.? are we just talking $5000 for looks...do people know about the pioneer vsa9500 from the 90s made in japan. the one with the dual power tansforms and honeycomb heatsink. It has a remote control and it is way more dynamic. it looks like a pos vsx elite pioneer with black aluminium face and gold letters. dont be fooled these models will impress you. these amps are like a fast NAD but with accurate bass control and quicker dynamics.
I have an Onkyo TX-5000. Bought new in 1981. It’s a great receiver and will last forever.
Hey from Australia. I bought an ONKYO 7.1 surround amplifier which is equipped with "THX" certification. Thanks George. Seriously it is a great amplifier. ONKYO made Quadraphonic units in the 70s with CD 4 discrete sound. WOW. I just sprayed my boxers. It never took off. A lot of people in the business are calling Dolby Atmos the 2020 version of CD 4 discrete. I don't know anyone who is running it unless they have lots of cash. The audio quality these days is great and I can't be bothered adding another 2 channels. In Star Trek First Contact, the audio steering is excellent to the point of why bother with 9.1 surround? All my Blu-ray discs sound phenominal and I had to install a DBX 163 to catch the transients going to the subs. As I'm a young 63, these amplifiers your showing here are just as brilliant as they were when released and after a recap, still sound as good if not better than some crap released today. Cheers. Andrew Collins. Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Have you ever considered a video on some of the sleeper receivers which were sold in Europe in the 1970s ? (although many have made it to North America over the years, because they have adjustable input voltage).
I have a few from Schaub-Lorenz, Philips, Nordmende, and one of the best is a Telefunken Opus 7050 HiFi, which has the typical wide, low black face Euro styling with green multiband dial scale. The tuner is incredible for selectivity and sensitivity, and the amplifier is clean and powerful, maybe 50 W / Ch.
Another great video. Sony receivers from the 70’s seem like great value to me. I’ve got a couple - an STR 6065 and an STR 7045 that I paid a total of $300 for. Both work flawlessly and they look and sound great.
Yes! I was about to suggest he does a video on Sony, especially from this era.
Ever hear Ohm speakers? American made in NY. Seem to show up in pockets of the country. Not sure why, possibly due to limited distribution.
I got one Onkyo TX 2500 MKII. Sounds really good. In fact my 12 year old stopped me from selling. I then realized how good it sounds. Hooked up to a technics SL D303 turntable, AKai CS -F39R cassette player and a Sony CD player. JBL LX44 speakers. All vintage setup. Except the CD.
I own several Onkyo MKII’s from the 1500 thru the 6500, still waiting to score a 8500. I think they’re one of the best looking receivers out there short a Sansui G series. And they do use glass and not plastic.
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Love my Onkyo 4500 MK II. It has served my well. Only problem is the tuner pointer has gotten off the numbers. I had it fixed once but happened again. I never listen to the radio anymore so no problem!
Have an Onkyo TX-4500 MKII and love it. Just be very careful when you clean the faceplate on these. If you use something harsh it will take all numbers and letters off of it
10:07 I have the TX-4500 MKII but I think it had a problem the last time I tried listening to it. Not sure if it’s a major problem but I’m going to try it again now that I’ve seen you review the series. Definitely gonna hang on to it and hopefully it can be repaired. Speaking of which, would it be worth the price to ship it to you for an evaluation and repair if needed?? Oops, nevermind, just read your channel description that you do not accept anything but walk-in patronage. Bummer!
I love the LED's. If Sherwood had access to LED's in 1979, they would have definitely used them.
Hi Kevin, That Onkyo series is outstanding, I picked up a 2500 MKII at a garage sale for $30 about 7 years ago and was instantly a fan. What an under the radar gem. The 4500 and 6500 is the same with more power.
The Sherwood that is never talked about is the S9110. 110 watts with phenomenal features and sound
Not sure I have run across a S9110 yet. Maybe soon?
@@skylabsaudio I ran into you at Axpona on Thursday night. We were talking about the JBL 4311. When I make the trip to stop by your place, I’ll bring my S9110 to you to service
Very cool. Was nice to meet you and chat! Hope you make it by sometime, John.
Gonna look at a 2500 MKII this weekend that has been fully serviced. IS the front plate glass or plastic? Does it feel substantial?
On my 8500 its originally glass, but mine was replaced with plexi. Looks the same though. Slightly smoked clear. @Frankieqd
If you end up with any mid to late 70's HH Scott Receivers in the shop for service, I would definitely take a look at them for a potential add to your sleeper list. The ones I have had experience with have been pretty solid units. The designs of the early to mid 70's units are a little plain in my eyes, while the later 70's units really took it up a notch in my opinion. In any case, great video. 👍
I can only suggest that you get a receiver big enough to have the features you want. Power switch (Pioneer), Speaker outputs, inputs, look. The wattage is not important, to me, since I can hear my Genesis G2+ speakers clearly out in the street with my SX-450. And yes, the SX-450 is the reason for my power switch..uh..phobia. Another fun one, keep them coming!
I live in the state north of Kevin. I might have to take a trip and check out his shop.
I still use my Onkyo TX-6500 MKII and love it. Plenty of power, great looks, and I am the original owner.
Good on ya. I have the original TX-4500(non mkII) and my face is smoked glass. He said "smoked plastic" but not my stuff. My 2500mkII is glass also....so maybe just a slip o' the tongue.(?)
I have this one as well, inherited from my father in law who was the original owner. Have the receipts and owners manual. What year was your purchase? I agree, this is one of the best units I've ever owned.
@bigcity2085 Agree, I don’t have any plastic on mine.
@carternash1384 Hi, I think I purchased it around 1979 or so, I was friends with a local stereo store owner and I had him special order it for me. I think it was around $500 at the time. I would love to have it cleaned out and gone over by a vintage repair shop but I don’t believe there are any in my city, upstate NY. I think a lightbulb may be out, and I’m sure it’s full of dust. But it works fine, needs a blast of dust spray in the volume control every once in a while. Take care.
@@sandyfader4649 Plus, you'll never see just the glass for sale, anywhere(at least I haven't)...it gets broke, that's it.
I sold the design acoustic series back in the 80s. FYI, they were designed for bookshelves. That’s the reason why they sound better or your service bench. Cool stuff, thanks for sharing.👍🏼
You have such good old fashioned horse sense. Anything that is better for the receiver is great!
I had a Onkyo TX 4500, I put soft white LED in it because I like the look. I ended up flipping it because I had too many stereos. That thing sounded so good. If I see another in the line I’ll grad it in a heartbeat. It sounded incredibly modern. Those are a great deal… great performance for dollar.
Just had my 4500 rebuilt . You can bury me with it. It's cool Kevin has brought out a lot of Onkyo people with this episode. Was starting to feel like the lost stepchild.
When I purchased my 9090 DB , I also purchased a pair of Design Acoustic D-6. The woofer was on the back side and required they be placed 2” from the wall
Another great video! I got a pair of Design Acoustics 9’s. Reformed the base drivers on the bottom and paired them with a Marantz 2245. Have them in a 15’ x 6’ x 3’ built in the wall bookshelf in on old 1910 house. They sound great as bookshelf speakers in a inclosed environment. Look forward to seeing your videos every Sunday morning!
All of those receivers looked great. Especially the Sherwood. I have a 20 watt Marantz 2220b. It has enough power to drive any of my speakers. I installed LED lamps because there was serious heat damage to the plastic lamp housing. Along with a reproduction face plate and new vellum, it looks like a museum piece.
Those Onkyo txii's are so awesome. In sound, appeal, and function. I'll never get rid of my 4500
Still have the incandescent lights in my SX 780 and 980 old school.
That Akai is really pretty with the glass around the knob. Nice touch on the extra light
Scott receiver 337
Overseas build
Never been touched
Still working great
Just a banging receiver in it
Sounds like a top of the liner
One of the receiver lines you just don't hear about
But very underrated
Those onkyo have fabulous phono stages
I have an Akai 1150 in the garage. Great sound and very reliable. Got it for free, replaced the blown amp transistors and away it went. That was 25 years ago.
A fun video, as always...definitely a fun one.
I've been into vintage audio gear for a long time but I just recently discovered the Concept brand. I was so impressed with the Concept 2.5 that I found that I just bought another one. Real wood top covers and veneer and solid builds. This is a brand that's going to be on my radar from now on.
Picked up a Concept 4.5 from a member on Discord. Excellent receiver! He sold me his 4.5 but kept his 3.5 that he liked better.
@@drsbranch-wn2vx I am now keeping my eyes open for bigger Concepts, too.
The LED upgrades you undertook really enhance those receivers. The green ambience LEDs were terrific. Great video, as per.
I'm definitely pro-Onkyo. I had a TX-6500 Mk II (100W/Ch). Zero complaints from the day I bought it till the day I sold it. It followed me from home to college and beyond...never complained. I'd get one without giving it a second thought (if I was in the market). While they don't have the following of Pioneer, I'd put them up against Pioneer and other contemporaries. In fact, the TX-6500 Mk II displaced, for me, a Pioneer SX-737 (also a great receiver for what is was). The Onkyo, for most of its life, drove a pair of Cerwin-Vega S1s (so, that is where I was in that part of my life) and then in college, a pair of Altec 604G/620 (aka Model 17)...we had the loudest apartment on campus!
I totally agree. I know it’s hard to believe but I picked up the TX - 6500 MK II at Goodwill for seven dollars about 11 years ago when you could find just about any electronics for cheap. It is a monster. I haven’t had to change caps or anything major since.
I took off the vinyl woodgrain and replaced it with walnut veneer. It is connected to Infinity Kappa 7’s and it still sounds fantastic.
@@markmelton9187 I had my TX-4500 checked out when I got it and all was good. I'm just a few years before the MK II's. I used my spare TX 2500 mk II most of the time, because the 4500 was just so exquisite I felt it shouldn't be day to day. So of course, when I decided to pull the 4500 out, a channel had gone down just sitting, so in for a rebuild she went - 3 months.My MK II is a tank and she hasn't needed a thing...but I'm glad I have 4500 set for life (hopefully)...but remember; these old repair guys won't be around forever.
…also thanks to Eric for his input!
Keep using that orange, on random units!
It’s absolutely fabulous that you highlighted that tuning knob! Akai was asleep at the wheel for ignoring it.
This is fine work.
Keep at it.
And, an EDIT: I need you guys to refer someone who can FULLY restore PORTABLES. My two favorites that I adore are the Superscope CRS-2200 from 1978, and the Sansui CP-7 from 1980.
I will never, EVER let go of these units. EVEN at their THD levels, when they were Brand New, they were simply Fabulous in their respective performances!
Maybe you mean Akai was asleep at the knob. Ha ha
@@scottprice8994 Spot-on, SP! Excellent!👌
I have a pair of PS-10. They are placement specific. They can sound horrible or amazing depending where you put them and what height.I found the sweet spot on mine and use them with my tube amp and turntable.
Harman Kardon HK505 integrated is an incredible integrated amp. High on my sleeper list.
Those Sherwood knobs may have been vapor honed as many audio units were in the 70's and 80's. I worked for JCPenney's in 1972 doing private label design for them. They purchased most electronics then from Matsushita in Japan. They sent a couple representatives from Japan to ask me what "Vapor hone" meant. I thought those guys invented it, but they didn't have a clue. It's basically passing the item through an acidic vapor to "etch" the finish. Not speaking English may have been a problem for them. I showed them an elevator door in the building that looked like the finish. They took a picture and a couple weeks later I got a sample that looked right. I suspect that tumbling the part in a slightly abrasive media could get the finish as well. Sorry for the geekish response, but product design was my life for 50 years!
Glad that you crack em open, it's always good to see what's going on inside.
Great Video !!! I am the owner of a fairly obscure receiver. Its a Project One Mark 600. These beasts were distributed by a company called Playback in the Midwest. Gorgeous aluminum faceplate, toggle switches and nice wooden case. Conservatively rated at 60 watts per channel, although i think its a lot more. Marketed to look like a Pioneer receiver. The only weakness they had was their VU meters. Finding one where all of them work is a challenge. Three out of my four VU meters work and my local repair guy just can't fix / repair the fourth one.
Good video, enjoyed it very much. My sleeper is a Realistic STA-95 from 1979. At 45wpc it's not a real powerhouse but it has great sound. Great to listen to but a nightmare to work on.
Great review as always. I currently own 2 Sherwood receivers s 7225 & s 7100a
I picked up a Fisher Studio Standard RS 1015 on ebay this past weekend for 66 dollars with tax 71 dollars and was able to pick it up free so no shipping . Everything works perfect even the tuning meter. Three of the 7 lights work. All will be working after this weekend. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE VIDEO. PS Fisher does make a stereo with only 12 watts.
the Kenwood Model 11s are one of my favorites. maybe not a deep sleeper, but the look of the unit is spectacular. also have every control and input you would want.
My sleeper is a Rotel RX-404. Might be cool to see it on your channel if you have one.
Hmmm. In the 70s I kept trading in my equipment. I started the Akai, then Sansui. Finally Onkyo. I should have kept the Sansui. But it was monster to move around all the time as a kid in university who never knew where the next "home" was going to be.
Excellent choice on the Akai lighting addition
Great Video, thank you. I have an Akai AA1175, which is the next step up from the 1050, with 75 watts / channel into 8 ohms and a mid-range control....sounds lovely.
Absolutely unique content. New subscriber here. An audiophile from the early 80s here. Onkyo and Sony Receiver fan. And in the early 70s, I was the teen who installed 8 speakers in my 68 Impala to go with my quad 8 track. Showing my age here The girl's loved cruising in my car with the stereo on blast. Good times back then😁
Hey Kevin. Another great vid. Love the Onkyo and the extra lighting on the Akai. What was your test music?
The LED’s are a slam dunk for sales. Cool blue is usually number one, they look great in the Pioneer SX- x80 and SX-x50 series receivers. I have an Onkyo 4500 mkii that I was planning to keep incandescent, but the blue in your 2500 has me rethinking that original plan.
I have the original TX-4500 with blue led's and it makes for a dark blue (possibly cuz my smoked glass is - well, smoked.. But, they're easy to change.(on mine). There might be more than one shade of blue, also.
The late 70s Kenwoods, JVCs, and Technics are also strong choices for guys who can't afford the big-time Pioneers and Sansuis.
Kevin & crew, I really enjoy these listening sessions! Brings back many memories of sitting in front of my Dad's old Kenwood. That Shurewood looks great with the white LEDs! Really clean! And yes, Fisher was a Sears exclusive brand. The Kenmore of hi-fi's. 👍
How did you get your electronics training? How long would it take for someone starting from scratch to get up and running to confidently repair vintage systems? Your channel is my “go to” on RUclips. I got laid off last July and I’m looking for a new fun career.
Hi Kevin. Thanks for another fun video and thanks for featuring my first receiver that I bought brand new in 1978, the Akai AA-1150. I paid $325 for the receiver in July of 78. By the way it delivers 50 watts into a 8 ohm load. Mine still works and sounds great. The only work it has received is a controls cleaning and LED replacements for the incandescent bulbs. I probably should replace some caps soon.
Thanks for the video!
BTY: If people want a more vintage (incandescent) looking LED just use the 2700 kelvin version in lieu of 4000 kelvin or K.
I really like videos like this! You show there’s plenty of performance in moderately priced equipment.
That Akai 1150 in green looked really good.
I have those speakers. Maybe an earlier version. Had to refoam them. I remember it being a little fiddly but not horrible. Very good near-field. Play with toe-in and you can get them to "disappear." Fun and enjoyable, plus those woofers can take a pretty big base hit, so to speak.
As for using different colors of LEDs to light a dial, I did a radio dial that changed color if I select AM or FM. You could use bicolor LEDs for that, or I used the light bar from a document scanner to light the dial. I tapped the AM/FM mode switch to get the power for the different colors. As for other selections like phono aux or such, have the VU meters only lit up.