Love my 430 powering ADS L1290 mkii speakers. Amazing sound. I used to have a 930, too, but it went belly up.
Harman/Kardon Receiver
Sometime ago I acquired for $75.00 a Harman/Kardon 430 receiver in exellent condition (all original) for a small bedroom system. After having it serviced, I have recently begun to use it, and I am astonished at how musical it sounds. Associated equipment include Snell J IV speakers and a Cary 308-T cd player, interconnects are by The Cord Company and speaker cable is by NAIM. The sound is so musical and satisfying that I can listen to it all day without any listener fatigue at all. My question is if some of you experts on receivers could tell me why it sounds so good? I have no information at all about this receiver and would appreciate any insights the Audiogon family could provide.
For what it is worth, in the past I heard a Harman/Kardon 730 receiver and did not find it nearly as involving musically.
Thanks to all in advance and cheers.
Avondale
For what it is worth, in the past I heard a Harman/Kardon 730 receiver and did not find it nearly as involving musically.
Thanks to all in advance and cheers.
Avondale
12 responses Add your response
xaviercg, Many thanks for your kind and informative response. I admired the work of Ropert Fulton and have a pair of his Premier speakers which I have had for 30 years and still consider it one of the very best speakers ever. I never imagined that he knew about the HK 430 or that it could be used to drive the Premiers! Best wishes. Avondale |
You have the best kept secret in audio! Some history, the 430 was discovered by Robert Fulton of FMI back in the mid 70's he preferred it to his Levinson ML1 He would it believe or not to drive his Premier 250lbs. speakers. Would use his Bravura preamp., and tap into the amp. section of the 430 for those 30 watts. Now naturally, the HK didn't have the power to drive his speakers to full range especially when playing symphonic music but when playing small ensembles, vocals, jazz and chamber music it 's like the musicians were in the room simply magical. Even by today's standards the HK430 is a keeper. Incidentally, Bob was the engineer that pointed out to the audio industry that speaker cable is a component, when everyone was using zip cord wire. Bob was an old school engineer new what music is suppose to sound like. Well I hope this helps, Best regards and happy listening, Xavier |
Here's a picture showing the output transistors for the 430. http://img.usaudiomart.com/uploads/large/553442-harman_kardon_430_twin_receiver.jpg IMHO, that is one reason for the quality sound. I have had experience with many vintage units, and the ones using this type of output transistor always sound very good. BTW, same type of output transistor as the NAD 3020. |
i'm also a big fan of the hk x30 series and still own a 730 and 330, having also owned the 930 and 430 at various points. i've read that unlike everyone else, hk used very little negative feedback in their designs, which resulted in less interface and transient interface distortion (whatever those may be), which are supposed to much more audible than THD. i'm not sure about the tech stuff, but to my ears the hk always sounded more lifelike than the sansui, pioneer etc. of the same era. |
The HK 430 is a bit of an anomaly. Not all receivers of that vintage sound so good. Prevalent use of discrete componentry, oversized power supply for the design and engineers who actually listened to the product probably explains most of it. I owned one, garage sale purchase for $20, took it home and gave it the classic Deoxit treatment. Ran it with a Nak CD player and a pair if Snell K monitors. Also ran Rogers LS3/5As, Spica TC 50s and various other monitors with satisfaction. A ridiculous product for the investment. |