Harmon Kardon PA 2000 Bridgeable Multichannel Amplifier

 This Harmon Kardon PA-2000 Power Amp tested at 158 RMS per side.  It is one of the finest sounding power amps we've had in ages. In Xlint condition at built like a tank!!!  The Caps are huge and is a well built as any power amp anywhere near this money!! Listed fairly with NO RESERVE!!
Discrete Amplifier output devices
Harmon Kardon PA 2000 Bridgeable Multichannel Amplifier
Harmon Kardon PA-2000
Fanless Cooling system
Designed for long speaker cable runs
Low impedance capability 
Parallel Line level outputs
Music sense auto on/off
Low voltage trigger jack
Rear panel trim pots for output level adjustment
Gold plated 5 way binding posts

Harmon Kardon PA 2000 Bridgeable Multichannel Amplifier
Harmon Kardon PA 2000 Bridgeable Multichannel Amplifier
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
Power Output
Normal Mode 4 x 75 watts @ 8 ohms, 20Hz – 20kHz,
Bridged Mode 2 x 160 watts @ 8 ohms, 20Hz – 20kHz,
High-Current Capability: ± 45 amps
Signal-to-Noise Ratio 110dB at rated power 45 watts
THD/IMD Less than 0.07% at rated output
Input Impedance 47K ohms
Input Sensitivity 1 volt for rated output
Remote Trigger Voltage 3 – 30 volts AC/DC
Remote Trigger Impedance 20K ohms
Dimensions (H x W x D) 6-1/8" x 17-3/8" x 15-3/4"
155mm x 442mm x 400mm
Weight 25.3 lb/11.4kg
Power Requirements 120VAC, 50Hz/60Hz
260 watts, maximum

Akai GX-77 Reel to Reel. Simply beautiful..

Akai GX-77 Reel to Reel

This may be the most beautiful of all the 7" size Reel to Reels. It plays and records extremely well, having had it serviced completely by Santa Cruz Audio. It has been restored to mint condition. It has all of the deluxe features like auto-reverse, and a nice looking dust cover that is built to stay on. This deck has beautiful sound quality, and is  in beautiful shape.  The GX-77 is very sophisticated in build and design. It blows away Teac and Pioneer units in sound quality.

Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel
Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel 
 Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel

Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel
Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel 

Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel
Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel 

Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel
Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel 

Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel Head assembly close up.
Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel Head assembly close up.


Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel Original Ad in Japanese
Akai GX-77 7" Reel to Reel Original Ad in Japanese
 Specifications:

Heads :
2x GX for play
2x GX for record
2x ferrite for erase

Motors :
1x FG DC-servo for capstan (DD)
2x DC for reel tables (belt)

Speeds :
19 cm/s (± 0,8%)
9,5 cm/s (± 1,0%)

Wow & flutter :
± 0,045% (19cm/s ; WRMS ; peak)
± 0,065% (9,5cm/s ; WRMS ; peak)

Frequency response :
25Hz...33Khz (± 3dB, 19cm/s, EE tape)
25Hz...25Khz (± 3dB, 9,5cm/s, EE tape)

THD : 0,5% (1Khz)
S/N ratio : 63dB (EIAJ)
Wind/rewind time : 80s (360m tape)
Reverse time : 0,4s.
Inputs : 70mV / ??kOhm
Outputs : 0,775V / ?? Ohm
Power Consumtion : 28W
Dimensions : 44 x 24,4 x 22,7cm
Weight : 17kg.
Optional : DC-77 dustcover (6500¥)
MP-515 15V adapter (2500¥)
RC-21 remote-control (6500¥)

More Audio Links

Audio Links
1-Electron (Service Manuals)
4tubes lots of schematics and data.
AmpsLab large collection of vintage tube amp schematics.
Audiogon
AudioAntik Information on tube audio, test equipment and speakers.
Audio Karma
Bona's Audio Page Technical info and schematics
Darad Tube Amps
Golden Sound "Schemes" Schematics of Russian Radios, Phono Amps.
H.H.Scott Hi-Fi Stereo Archive All vintage H.H. Scott equipment.
Leak Page excellent information on Leak.
Nostalgia Air schematics for early radios, Rider's Manuals
Tannoy Page Tannoy information.
Triode Electronics Schematic Index tube-type audio equipment.
Vintage Radio and Audio Pages schematics and service info.
Vintage Audio (Ukraine)
Wade's Audio and Tube schematics of vintage audio equipment.

My favorite tube amps

I have always had a preference for the sweet sound of a tube power amp, from my first Dynaco Stereo 70 back in the 70's. I see they have never gone out of style, and most true audiophiles will swear by them. Nothing solid state even comes close to the depth, tonality, and lush sound produced by a tube power amp. I will highlight some of my all time favorites here. This is my favorite of all:
The Acoustic Research  Reference 150. The Reference 150 output is 150Wpc into 8 ohms. The  power output stage consist of eight KT120 output tubes in matched pairs, each pair driven by a 6H30 driver. The output-stage coupling is the familiar ultralinear configuration topology.The sound this monster can produce is sweet, silky, and effortless. This is not cheap at 13,000 USD, but it's worth every cent if you love music. The sound puts any solid-state amp to shame. The internal photo shows the engineering talent to full effect: A tightly regulated massive power supply, with a total of 24 B+ power supply caps and  top quality components throughout. The symmetrical layout adds to the stereo separation, and the left and right channel are separated by the output and power transformers that are laid out right down the middle. This increases the overall sense of depth and space. If you have thought that an amplifier could not make much of a difference, be prepared to be amazed.

Audio Research Reference 150


Marantz Model 2385 Receiver for sale!

 This Marantz 2385 Receiver was rated at 185 RMS per side and tested at 225 per side!!!  As well built as any, as any vintage receiver!!!  So well built you would be amazed at the power supply, caps and heat sinks. In the day, it was well over $1000 and today it would cost $5000 easy to build it with this quality!!  A rare find in very good condition and a serious find!!! I think it in the very top receivers ever built, it's that good. These photos were taken before it is becoming fully serviced.

Up for sale is a very hard to find Marantz 2385.. It comes in at 200 Watts per channel and weighs a ton! Huge Toroidal power transformer and storage caps the size of beer cans. Everything about this receiver just reeks quality. When you see it in real life you'll know what I mean. The volume control is not your typical Marantz volume control that you find on the smaller receivers, it is stepped so that you can have perfect control. I had this receiver hooked up to many speakers and I can tell you it literally rocks the house. The bass is probably the first thing you'll notice with this beast, it is very full and round !! This is one very powerful receiver. When the volume is up it makes my 120 watt receivers seem weak. It still maintains that typical Marantz sound but for some reason it sounds a bit more detailed in the highs than some of the others. Which I find a plus cause some of them can sound maybe a little too laid back. If you have hard to drive speakers than you should seriously consider this brute to power them. The reserves are endless. The condition of the receiver is really good. There are a few marks here and there but nothing significant. All the knobs are perfect. The receiver will not disappoint. All the lights work, there are no scratchy pots and it operates perfectly. FM stations come in perfect.

INCREDIBLE BUILD QUALITY AND ENOUGH POWER FOR ANY SPEAKER SET WITH GREAT VINTAGE SOUND AND IT IS WAITING FOR A NEW HOME.
Marantz 2385 with top cover off, exposing massive power supply and heat sinks.
Marantz 2385 rear  view.


Yamaha M-50 Natural sound power amplifier.





Specifications
Minimum RMS Output per Channel: 
120 Watts (8Ω, 20 to 20,000 Hz no more than 0,002% THD)
200 Watts (4Ω, at 1 kHz, clipping Power)
Power bandwidth (8Ω, Half rated power):  10 to 100,000 Hz (0,02% THD)
Input Sensitivity/Impedence (8Ω, rated power):  1,1 V/25 kΩ
Frequency Response (8Ω Half rated power, 100 kHz):  -0,5 dB
Signal-to-Noise Ratio (IHF A network):  122 dB
Total Harmonic Distortion (8Ω Half rated power):
20 Hz : 0,0005%
1 kHz : 0,0005%
20 kHz : 0,001%
50 kHz : 0,004%
100 kHz : 0,01%
Intermodulation Distortion (8Ω Half rated power 50 Hz : 7 kHz = 4;1): 0,002%
Channel Separation (8Ω Half rated power , Input Shorted):
20 Hz : 100 dB
1 kHz ; 95 dB
20 kHz : 70 dB
Damping Factor (8Ω 1 kHz):  Better than 200
Slew Rate (Sp Out):  200 V/µsec
Power Supply:  Matched to supply voltage and frequency of all area
Power Consumption:
USA and Canada : 350 W/1,200 VA
Europe and Australia : 550 W
Other Areas : 200 W
Dimensions (W x H x D):  435 x 133 x 380 mm (17-1/8" x 5-¼" x 15")

Weight:  11,8 kg (26 lbs)

Introducing the Pure Zero Distortion Rule Sound
Her, at  last, ia a power amplifier output stage that actually adds no distortion to the music signal. Although the actual technology involved in the Zero Distortion Rule amplifier is quite sophisticated, the basic principle of this incredible high-accuracy amplifier is quite simple. Essentially the Zero Distortion Rule system consists of a distortion detector and a summer. The distortion detector derives a signal corresponding to any distortion products originating in the amplifier itself, and the summer adds this signal back into the original audio/distortion signal - out of phase with the original signal. This effectively  cancels the distortion signal, leaving the audio signal intact and virtually distortion-free.

The Yamaha Zero Distortion Rule Amplifier vs. Negative Feedback and Feed Forward Systems
Negative feedback is the most commonly used means for reducing distortion in audio amplifiers. The amount of distortion reduction, however , is directly controlled by the amount of feedback applied. This means that in order to reduce distortion to zero, infinite feedback must be appliedd. Obviously, it is physically impossible to create infinite negative feedback, and therefore also impossible to achieve zero distortion by this method,. Increasing application of negative feedback can only approach the zero distortion ideal, while ZDR actually permits crossing the zero distortion line and creating negative distortion, making it theoretically possible to completely eliminate distortion.
The feed forward system of distortion reduction attemps to cancel distortion by adding an inverted distortion signal to the audio signal to the audio signal at the amplifier's output where signal power levels are high.
This means that expensive, high-power feed forward circuitry is required, and overall power efficiency is extremely low.  Also, the high-power feed forward amplifier required can actually add unwanted distortion. Zero Distortion Rule performs its distortion cancellation ata the amplifier's inputs thereby eliminating the power problem. And since the ZDR circuit is essentially concerned only with low-level signal, it cannot add any distortion of its own.

Linear Transfer Bias Circuit
Another feature of the M-50 power stage is its Linear Transfer Bias circuitry. This unique bias syatem minimizes crossover distortion due to non-uniform linearity between the power transistors in a push-pull power stage. By applying precisely calibrated bias to each transitor in the M-50's cascoded push-pull power circuit and thereby staggering the operating point of each, a perfectly linear composite transfer characteristic is achieved, ensuring negligible crossover distortion levels. The unbeatable combination of the Linear Transfer Bias circuit and Zero Distortion Rule amplifier design results in outstanding low-distortion power performance and incredibly natural source reproduction.