Do any still use an older high end tuner from the past?....


Things like the CT-7000 from Yamaha, other Marantz, Magnum, Fisher, Scott or any others.  It would be good for us "tuner people" to hear your experience with older, former SOTA tuners.  Thanks. 
whatjd
And of course, Rich's work on MR78'a is also highly recommendable which of course is a solid state tuner. Except if you count a one off version of the MR78 which in fact is tubed. But that one is safely with Rich, and I don't think he's interested in making other one. 
One correction and one addition.....
Over the years......

Lux T110, Tandberg 3001a, McIntosh MR78, Scott 4310 (Foster Blair fixed it up for me), Three different Scott 310-B w 335mpx (all fixed up by Foster), Yamaha CT-7000, Sansui TU-X1 (aligned, upgraded, recapped), Magnum Dynalab MD108.

By far the best is the only one I still have.  The Sansui.  One good classical station in the area still makes it worthwhile.  Channel Master TV-7? Antennae mounted in attic.  Incredible sound quality.

One of the Three Scott 310-b I had was my prior vintage favorite, simply terrific.  The 4310 was probably the most exotic but a little scary with all the controls and so many tubes.
My MR80 (McIntosh) is (i think) over 25 years old and still pulls in the stations
I have one of the very first Sequerra Tuners ( S/N 1006 ) . Still sounds great and in perfect condition about 40 years after I bought it  . It is a strange fit for the rest of my system which is at the tippy-top of the cutting ( bleeding ? ) edge . 
I'm selling a McIntosh MR-67.  I see quite high prices for mint condition units.  It's a very good tuner in mint condition.  I'm keeping the AM/FM high end Kenwood tuner 600T as it is more sensitive, dual band and cost me only $150 in mint condition several decades ago.  The MR-67 has a warmer, fuller sound (it's loaded with tubes) versus the 600T which is SS but works well with my neutral sounding tube system.