T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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88.1 | NAD delivers but.... | BAHTAT::SALLITT | Dave - @RKG & ICI, 0642432193 | Thu May 25 1989 06:43 | 12 |
| The NAD 4225 is a good tuner; stations that were very noisy on my
old Technics come through loud and clear.
Although its selectivity and sound quality are good, its sensitivity
isn't particularly special at 2mV, so a good roof mounted aerial
is essential - but that's true of any tuner if you want it to work
at its best. Since the NAD is about 130 notes it doesn't leave much
in your budget for an aerial, though.
Dave
|
88.2 | which tuners ? | ZPOV01::PARRYCHUA | | Fri Jun 16 1989 01:57 | 8 |
| I am looking a tuner which should have more than 7 preset station.
Any one know the performance and audio quality of the following
tuners ?
ONKYO T-4500, DENON TU-550, PIONEER F-443 and SONY ST500(222 in
Singapore).
Thanks/parry
|
88.3 | Qustions about an old tuner | RUTILE::MACFADYEN | sensitive, cultured | Fri Jan 08 1993 15:22 | 17 |
| A kind friend, hearing me mutter about getting a tuner, brought round
an ancient Sony thing to my flat. It's called an ST-88, is the size
and shape of a small loudspeaker, and, being encased in wood, looks
positively antique. I didn't expect much from it.
However I'm very impressed with the actual sound. Real hi-fi off the
radio - what a pleasure! This thing gives a very rich and detailed
sound which doesn't sound that bad even against my deck. The only
thing is that it still sounds radio-ish somehow; sort of a very
slightly muffled sound.
Can anyone tell me anything about this unit? How would it compare
against something modern? Is the radio station doing anything to the
signal that would make it sound muffled? (Like, what's compression?)
Rod
|
88.4 | Ancient Sony Gear | BRUMMY::RICHARD | Your robot sounds like Pink Floyd | Fri Jan 08 1993 15:55 | 16 |
|
I have the flat midi sized version of this tuner, along with matching amp and
speakers.
The tuner was offered in both 'flat' and 'upright' versions, if yours is the model
that I remember, the dial is large and round?
The tuner suffers from awful selectivity, intermod, spurious rejection etc.. and
is based on very early tuner theory, I would expect that it is of 1975 vintage.
However, it was ok for the era, however you get a lot more bang with a 75
quid tuner these days.
_Richard
|
88.5 | | KRAKAR::WARWICK | Can't you just... ? | Fri Jan 08 1993 22:51 | 23 |
|
It's always worth getting a decent aerial, as other notes in this
conference state ad nauseam.
Compression is where quiet bits of music are automatically boosted to
make them louder, thus flattening out the dynamic range of the music.
This is the same effect as you get with cheap, crappy, tape recorders
that have no record-level control.
I find it rather annoying, and Radio 1 certainly has a great deal of
compression applied. It is most obvious when you hear a track that you
know has a quiet intro. which then suddenly gets louder - the effect of
the crescendo is removed. Sometimes, on a track which has actual
silences in it, you can hear the increasing amounts of hiss during the
silences as the thing doing the compression continually has to boost
the gain right up and cut it back again.
I think the rationale behind it is to make the sound more "exciting",
and to improve things for people listening in cars or other noisy
environments.
Trevor
|
88.6 | | RUTILE::MACFADYEN | sensitive, cultured | Mon Jan 11 1993 14:23 | 9 |
| The aerial with it is one of those long T-shaped things. I can arrange
it so that there's no obvious hiss or stuff like that. Do things
continue to improve in a 'hi-fi' manner if you fiddle with it more
or get a better aerial?
Thanks for the comments.
Rod
|
88.7 | | BAHTAT::SALLITT | Dave @LZO 845-2374 | Mon Jan 11 1993 18:36 | 8 |
| re .6.....
"Do things
continue to improve in a 'hi-fi' manner if you fiddle with it more
or get a better aerial?"
Not much, and more than you can imagine, respectively.
Dave
|