The Best & Rarest of all Stereo Gear


When it comes to stereo gear, to me, besides sound and build quality/reliability, the next thing I look for is how rare it is. There is just something about very rare, one-off, stereo gear that makes it very enticing to find and acquire. Over the years, I've been lucky enough to have found some rare gear and there's still others items that I'd like to find.

Recently, in my local CL, there was a very rare pair of Symdex speakers available for $50 that retailed at over $2200. When I inquired about them, they were gone. There is very little on the net about these speakers and later was lucky enough to have found a pair of Paisley Research AE-500 speakers. The Paisleys are amazing & are really giving my Omega Grande 8's a run for their money.

How about the Wingate 2000a amp? In 30 years, I've never seen one of these beauties for sale. Does anyone remember the EJ Jordan shoe box sized amp and preamp?

Please share if you are fortunate enough to have owned any ultra rare gear or if you are looking to acquire something unusual. (I'll share my own list of rare acquisitions and wants in a follow up post. I didn't want to make this initial post too lengthy).

Look forward to hearing your responses, thanks for reading,
Lou

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i owned a pair of the large Nestorovic 5as speakers which you could consider rare. They weren't perfect but they were great in some ways and I really enjoyed my time with them.
I still own a pair of Celestion Kingstons which are also sort of rare and also very good.

I agree that it is a little more added fun to own an unusual component.
I forgot...I also own an Audio Note Kit One integrated 300B amp which is by no means rare, but mine is the 10th Anniversary edition with the dual c-core transformers, which not too many people order. 
Anyone ever own the Streets Electronic 950 amp or a Wingate amp?  Those looked awesome.  I once heard a Wingate at a high end show, but the rep was this young kid who believed everyone wanted to hear it at ear splitting levels and wouldn't turn it down.  Right now, I'm kind of digging on these rare 70's-80's turntables, maybe not so rare, just old :)

I have the very rare Biotronics Control Systems Gestalt phono preamplifier. I challenge someone to find information on it. It has some sort of active variable bass control and sounds very smooth. The board traces are heavy and appear plated with silver. It is obvious the unit (with its outboard power supply) was designed for the serious listener.
I suppose much of what I currently run is rare and quite nice sounding.  My preamp is custom-made by Aldo D'Urso in Italy.  This makes it "modern," although very few of the components are actually modern.  The chassis, tube (310 and 311s), input and output transformers, all of the resistors and capacitors and the Daven attenuators for balance are all quite old and repurposed; the only thing new is the remotely controlled volume pot and the power transformer in the separate power supply.  My amp, also built by Aldo, is essentially a stereo version of the Western Electric 133 amp--348 input/driver tubes, 349 output tubes, the correct Western Electric input and output transformers, vintage caps and resistors, etc; the only part that is new is the power transformer.

My speakers were made by Strumenti Acustici Precisione, but, I replaced the midrange horn with a circa 1939 Western Electric 713b compression driver and a Western Electric horn (the replacement midrange is free standing on the top of the bass driver cabinet, just like the horn it replaces).   The WE 713b is a terrific midrange driver, but, it is now VERY hard to obtain a matched pair of these things.

The rest of the system is more modern and still in production, although the Viva Fono phono preamp is not a common item.
All interconnects made by Confirmation Bias Cable Co. are the absolute best!  

While terribly expensive, they work like magic on the psychoacoustics of the ear-brain interaction.