At a Levinson crossroads .... need advice.


I need a little advice folks ...

About two years ago I purchased a Mark Levinson No.360S DAC and was very pleased with how it fit into my system. To this I added a No. 37 transport to match the 360S and was initially happy with that as well.

Here is a breakdown of what I put together :

Modwright SWL 9.0 Linestage
Mark Levinson No. 23.5 Amplifier (Summer)
McIntosh MC275 Amplifier (Winter)
Mark Levinson No.360S DAC
Mark Levinson No.37 transport
Proac Response D Two
Velodyne DD-10

Cardas Crosslink ICs
Acoustic Zen ICs
Signal Cable Silver ICs
Cobalt Cable 10 GA copper speaker cable

Like I stated before; I am very, very pleased with the sound. I have the system in a medium sized bedroom converted into a listening space. Everything was wonderful for about 3-4 months and then the transport started to skip. After a month or two of occasional skipping it started skipping all the time. I took it in locally to a trusted tech and he did the best he could but it didn’t help. I purchased the No. 37 from a seller on Audiogon but I felt enough time had gone by that it wasn’t fair to ask for assistance. I had only put 15-20 hours on the unit but I feel you have a fairly short time after the purchase of an item to report a problem. Six months after a purchase is just too far down the road for me. I have my PC plugged into the 360S as well and listen to FLAC files more than CDs but I do like to spin a CD every now and then. I paid close to $2K for the 37 and not it sits on the rack covered and silent.

My question is "What to do?" I found out the only place to get the unit repaired is Pyramid audio in Texas and I have read mixed reviews on their service. I called and talked to a technician and repairs could easily run over $1000. I have emailed a few members selling units and asked about the No. 37's reliability. Most people I talk to were pretty happy with the units. I was wondering who else out there has gone though this experience and how did it work out? Anyone out there happy with their No. 37 repairs from Pyramid? Any estimate on what this will do to me financially? I am wondering if I have a defective unit and should sell it as is for a fair price and move on or maybe it just needs a new laser assembly and it will be good as new. I'm not all that familiar with this unit but it's a big turn off when Harmon bows out of repairing vintage ML gear and will only supply parts to one or two repair shops in the world. Certainly there are gifted techs out there that could do the work if they could only get the parts. I certainly don’t want to play "tennis" with this unit shipping it back and forth to Texas if the repairs are not complete. If I put another $1000 into this thing and have more problems I'm going to be less than happy.

As always you input is appreciated.

Mike
128x128horseface

Showing 2 responses by french_fries

i had a #37 that made a scraping sound and also did some skipping (after about 4 years from brand new). there is a kit that costs under $50 that replaces the lift-mechanism that puts the cd in the "play" position. you have to open the unit (remove the BOTTOM panel) and then replace what you see (exactly). it does not take special tools but you do have to have confidence that you can do it. there are no electrical connections or other issues however in doing this service. otherwise, yes, if you involve an authorized repair service,
you will be spending alot of money- get an estimate 1st...
all this is disappointing, but other manufacter's cdp's/transports also have had mechanical issues as well, ESPECIALLY the more expensive they are, the more aggrevating. when levinson was doing "better" years ago repairs were still expensive but the units were very thoroughly bench tested-
by the same people that put them together in the 1st place.
someday perhaps the company will recover from its more recent spotty reputation.
i also had the 360S and it did an awsome job, esp. on hdcd (ref.recordings) with the #37. the sound was just shy of the "reference" 31.5/30.6 at a fraction of the price; in fact levinson eventually stopped making the reference-level gear as a result. but again, this solid reputation for leading the digital front-end technology has suffered. and now some say the new levinson SACD player has some reliability issues. for $15k it "should" outperform meridian/esoteric etc. players and play for thousands of hours without any hiccups. AND, if it doesn't, you send it back and get a NEW unit, with levinson paying shipping both ways. then you get customers BRAGGING about the service, which results in a whole bunch of NEW sales of the cdp. which is the "american way", right? btw, i am trying to be serious here. i mean, just how many leading brands are going to be dissed into the ground and eventually disappear from the market, only to leave you with alot of strange looking and expensive foreign brands (like nagra) or a lot of controversial "conversion D/A technologies". i always looked up to a few industry leaders and put up with their occasional short-comings, rather than wondering if the oversampling/upsampling/resampling "gizmo's" inside of the competition were better or just out there to impress the digital-tech lovers.
the levinson 23.5 is no longer "the last word" in stereo amps, but it can still bring music to life WAY better than nad or
denon, hafler, etc. something i had to experience for myself through my demo B&W 801's. and the BASS coming out of those speakers was !!! instruments with "texture" and nuances you could easily hear for the 1st time made a huge impression on me- not to mention the unbeatable looks of the amp. like i said, if levinson goes away it may have a decidedly negative affect the overall market. for example, pass labs, an absolutely terrific company, now makes the X amps and XA amps. both good, but one has lots of clean power, while the other offers sound at another level altogether.
this is a real conundrum for someone with the ability to spend this kind of money, but which do you get?! at least with tube amps you can flip a switch to get triode or pentode. or i could mention the ever-changing krell amps.
i had an FPB-300 which i thought was a really great amp with all the power you would ever need. but now i see krell evo monoblocks with 900W/ch??!! Macintosh wasn't happy with 1000W/ch either, so now they have 1200W monoblocks with the biggest meters you can buy. WOW, right? hey, i like all the stuff mentioned here, but a ML-23.5 with the thick aluminum case-work and the subtle white etchings on the front with the tiny red led was enough for me. 200W/CH that tested to output much more (almost 300W)- THAT amp can drive just about any speaker in the world. and it made music. another example of my admiration for levinson- the ML-20.6 monoblocks ("only" 100W) drove a pair of WILSON WAMM'S i got to hear years ago (with a bryston stereo amp bridged to mono to drive the two subwoofer cabinets). some of the best sound i will EVER get to hear, even WITH all of the HUGE improvements in amplifier technology that has occurred since that time. the dealer had classe audio, bryston, and even goldmund on hand that they could have used, but the ML gear just seemed like the logical choice to produce the clean power and transparency needed. experiences like that don't ever get forgotten.