I started with a cheap, portable turntable/speaker unit, then Sansui 8080, Empire, ESS AMT1a
Family system was a Zenith mini console. It was a large rectangular box. The doors were the speakers which opened out and hung on the unit. The TT was on a spring which you pushed so that it either receded into the unit or "dropped down". The top facing glass had the buttons for functions. I was about 10 or 11 got my brother's second hand Kay guitar and worked out chords to CCR, Hendrix (when my parents were out as he was "forbidden fruit" I borrowed from my brother, BB King, Cream, whatever. Got a paper route and first bought a used Epiphone Wilshire guitar and amp then in JR high school a Scott SS amp, BIC TT and I think BIC speakers, not sure it was over 50 year ago. Got a job in a record store and helped out at an audio store where we supplied the classical records. The owner liked me and sold the record store owners a used McIntosh MA5100 to give me for my HS graduation. Used graduation money to buy demo JBL monitors. Had it thru college until I went to graduate school out of state and it all "disappeared" from the house due to various of my 4 brothers needing a stereo or money. |
@jasonbourne71 Down with you on 2270's.... ....had everything I desired at the time...*S* And continued to do so for quite awhile.... And considering the prices of reconditioned and/or mint ones.....would have made for a nice investment...*L* |
@bigwave1 I bought a pair of Bose 401's from Crazy Eddie. |
Like @motown-l , I started audiophilia with a Pioneer SX-525 and an idler. In my case a Dual 1214 with a Stanton cart of some sort. This was in 1973. Speakers were Marantz 4G, which I doubled and stacked a year later. Then Koss headphones. I loved that system for more than a decade—before early stages of nervosa set in! |
In the Summer of ’68 (how many here were then not yet born? 😊 ) I put together my first system: a Garrard SL55 with a Shure M44e cartridge, a Fisher X-100A integrated tube amp, and Acoustic Research 4ax loudspeakers. Not a bad place to start. The following year I replaced the Garrard with an Acoustic Research XA table with a Shure M91e cartridge. Three years later I discovered Stereophile (from an ad in the back of Audio Magazine iirc), and the race was on! In ’73 I got myself what many audiophiles were getting: Magneplanar Tympani’s bi-amped with ARC Dual 75 and Dual 51 power amps and an SP-3 pre-amp, a Thorens TD-125 Mk.2 with a Decca arm and cartridge, and a Revox A77 Mk.3. I didn’t care for the Decca arm (I dislike unipivots), soon replacing it with an SME 3009 Improved. I could live with that system today. Actually, I now have Tympani’s and London (Decca) cartridges, but evolved versions of each. |
@motown-l Your dorm system sounds a lot like mine. I had KLH Model 32 loudspeakers, which were the lowest priced KLH speaker made at the time. I paid $80/pair and that was stretching it for me. I had a Heathkit AJ-14 FM tuner I built from kit, a used Dynaco SCA-35 integrated tube amp, and a Garrard Type A record changer with a Shure M3D cartridge. |
Same here. I had been reading electronics mags for a couple of years and really wanted to move on from the old portable record player with speakers I inherited from an older sister, and the table radio. I was talking to my Mom about Christmas presents I wanted and told her I’d really like to have a new stereo receiver. Mom didn’t know anything about such gear, but she went to a local department store and a salesman recommended a model. This one — Pioneer SX-626: https://www.hifiengine.com/manual_library/pioneer/sx-626.shtml I received it on Christmas 1971 when I was a month shy of 17. It was pricey — $300! I loved it but had nothing else to attach to it or play it through. For a while I got by listening on cheap headphones, until I gradually fleshed out the rest of the system. The page above states 20 watts per channel, but the manual that came with it read 27 watts per channel. Either way, I was in love with it for several years, until the sound became muddy (I did not know about having caps changed and such) and I gave it to Salvation Army in the early 80’s. That piece got me started. 😊 |