Accuphase E-202 Integrated


I recently bought one of these beauties and have been really amazed at how sweet and seductive it sounds after solving a minor volume/balance issue. I imagine one would have to spend $3K+ to match its performance today but the build quality would likely be lacking and you probably would be without a QUALITY phono stage. The only nitpick so far is that it does not produce quite as wide a soundstage as I like, though its depth and texture is top-shelf. With an AUX inputs, two tape inputs, TWO phono inputs, and pre and amp mains, it is well-equipped. One of the super phono stage inputs even has variable level control and variable loading (30k, 47k, and 100k).

I am giving it a careful listen over the next couple-o-weeks before forwarding my impressions to my local electronics wizard for purposes of tailoring internal updates. I figure a cap or three will need replacing eventually, anyway.

The seller described this unit as 9.5 cosmetically, and I figured I’d be happy if it turned out to be an 8.0 – the way most folks describe these days. Turns out to be damn near a 10.0. I showed pictures to someone who said I should post them for all to see as “reference material”. Link below does just that.

Accuphase E-202
4yanx
Thanks for the messages. Yes, Jaybo, the phono stage has turned out to be just EXCELLENT. The more I hear this piece, the better I like hearing this piece!
I sold my Levinson 383 and replaced it with the accuphase e-202 (as I was scaling back my investment prior to an overseas move) and it was not a signficant loss in detail with similar if not superior solidity in the bottom end. I have taken my accuphase overseas and now run it through 240V without it missing a beat (a simple switch on the back). I had Goertz terminate some MI2 copper cables with tiny spades that fit the rear speaker terminals solving one of the biggest beefs with this unit. I am unable to use a more serious power cord but seem to get best results when I put the nite cord on my cd player anyway. The e-202 really makes my Virgo II's sing and it has done so on several continents. Yours is absolutely mint. Please let me know if there is a tweak or upgrade that makes a significant/demonstrable improvement to the unit's sound.
Thanks. Good tip on the speaker wires as those lugs are a pain. I saw some "converters" sold buy a guy in Hong Kong that might be a solution, as well - but still one more connection.

After some other input, and considering that this one coul dnot be more mint unless it was brand new, I am nearly certain that I will not be going the uograde route with this piece. I contacted both Accuphase and Accutech electronically and have heard nothing in return. I have heard through the grapevine that Accutech charges on the order of $700 to do a complete tuneup on an E-202. I will not be doing that if such is the case. Anyway, I may ultimately eschew any work, at least for the immediate time. I popped the hood, and from the looks of the screws and the pull of the foam adhesive around the periphery, I'm certain I was the first. I did the DeOxit job on all the pots and switches. Upon visual inspection, there are no swelled caps or anything of the sort - looks as pristine inside as outside. In fact, there was virtually no dust to speak of, either. My seller said that he had kept it boxed for over 10 years and thought that the original owner had kept it boxed for most of its life. If the lack of interior dust is any indication, I doubt it has sat out on a shelf more than a couple hunderd hours.

In addition, this things sounds SO good that I think I'll just use it in a retro system my son and I are building and maybe revisit updates if we start to hear anything untoward or scratchy. Thanks again for the advice.
I have bought two sets of the small spade converters from that ebay Hong Kong seller for my vintage McIntosh amps. They take about 2 weeks to arrive and work great.

If your amp hasn't been used much, it probably doesn't need an overhaul anytime soon. $700 sounds like the right ball park though.

Arthur