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
Ditto on the AR Amp. I have one in storage with my AR Tuner.

Separately, following up on my earlier post, I have since replaced my Emotiva UMC-1 with an Outlaw 975, and the 975's FM tuner section has clearly better reception than the UMC-1 using the same antenna setup (Magnum Dynalab ST2 whip into MD 205 Signal Sleuth).
We had an AR (Acoustic Research) tuner come through the shop recently. It needed a new filter capacitor in the power supply, and one of the rectifiers was leaky so I changed both out. After that is spec'ced out quite nicely on the bench and pulled in weaker stations in town with no worries- better than I was expecting. I wasn't expecting much to be honest; the AR amplifier was a terrible beast so it was a nice surprise to see that the tuner was much more competent.
@frogman A belated reply to you long-ago question about the Museatex FMT Tuner, if you're still curious. I have one. I bought it about 20 years ago from a Sales Rep after Museatex stopped business, so had been rarely used, only shown, and treated with utmost care.

I've had several "audiophile" tuners over the years, and the FMT is one of them. I've been comparing just this week with my Tandberg 3001, and preferring the FMT. The sound is expansive, lush and "embraces" you. It's probably too "romantic", a coloration. The Tandberg, OTOH, is crisp and crystal clear, with loads of minute detail. I admire its accuracy but love the FMT's musicality (I don't like that word, but there it is). It's just more involving, and if the particular piece Music can sweep me away, the FMT only helps. I can listen to the FMT for longer periods with more pleasure... if the programs warrant it. Voices are so real they're (another cliché) in the room with you.

I haven't much to add technically because where I live, Los Angeles, the FM transmitters are only a few miles away, on mountaintops over a flat terrain, and signals are strong. It's laden with features I rarely use, such as 95 presets, two independent antenna inputs, micro-fine tuning... and more, but I have little expertise in Tuners.

I have the remote — I'm told only 20 or so were made — and it's handy but not a dealbreaker.

I share your enthusiasm for the brand. I'm using the 100W stereo power amp now. Again the sound is "luscious" but doesn't cloud the detail, nuance, the ambient sound of venues, and a broad and deep soundstage. I think it's better than the Meitner monoblocks, which I used to have, and have a more stellar reputation.

Not such a fan of the preamps though. I've had both, and the newer one was not an upgrade, IMO, the first was cleaner. But to my ears both sound a bit misty. I don't use either, except as a separate —

— power supply for the also-rare Phono Preamp, which I think is exceptional.

I hope this very small review is helpful, and sorry it's so late — I just didn't see your question till I idly googled the FMT the other day. But if I can help, of course just ask.

And if I'm doing something wrong with the preamps that lessens their performance, please advise me.


There are lots of used tuners on the market, but in my opinion most are not worth over $100. Clearly there are exceptions.My experience is that the old Philips AH673 is a good tuner, once it has been refurbished and aligned. But the cost of a good refurb is several hundred dollars. A Magnum Dynalab MD90 tube is close, but it depends on what each tuner sells for. Check out my comments on Canuck Audio Mart tuner forum.
I have a Sansui TU-X1.

You need his wingman AU-X1 now.

I occasionally use a Pioneer TX 9500 with Bic FM 10 as an antenna; unfortunately the commercial radio stations in my area infest the ether with bad music and transmissions that saturate the signal.
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stereo5
FM HD radio is sounding very good.
Really?
An FM station using just one HD sub-channel has a maximum of 96 kbps. It’s worse if it uses multiple HD sub-channels. So HD radio is kinda like mp3 files; good s/n, but that’s about it. In other words, it’s anything but "high definition," as iBiquity/Xpiri acknowledge.
Right now listening to my McIntosh MR88 tuner.   FM HD radio is sounding very good. 
midareff168 posts04-01-2020 11:01am
I have and still use a Sansui TU-9900 ... Even with a Magnum Dynalab Signal Sleuth and 1/2 wave mast I can't get 125+ mile away west coast stations with any degree of Fidelity and consistency ...
FM is VHF, so reception is arguably confined to line-of-sight, which is limited by the curvature of the earth and the height of a radio station's antenna. As a practical matter, even with the best equipment, it is usually difficult to get reliable reception beyond 65-70 miles.
I have and still use a Sansui TU-9900 that has been modded to the max by Mike at Radio X.  It ran many CD players out of my listening room and I doubt I will ever take it from the system but more of my listening these days is by Cambridge CXN (V2) streamer.  That is probably more a byproduct of the very limited amount of stations in the Miami/Fort Lauderdale area.  Even with a Magnum Dynalab Signal Sleuth and 1/2 wave mast I can't get 125+ mile away west coast stations with any degree of Fidelity and consistency so that's it, maybe one classic rock, one country, one jazz is about it while there are hundreds if not thousands of each online.
I still have a good NPR station in the area and currently use a Yamaha T85. Good FM and AM (for talk shows, etc). Things are so cheap now I couldn't resist picking up a used Kenwood T07 modified and aligned. FM only. We'll see.
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Hi,
very open, image size, haunting mids, impressive stereo. Sounds better than it looks. 

As a young man I loved the look of the  Sony ST-J88B, but did not know of its sonic merits.


Sony ST-J88B, new caps, transistors, lamps, op-amp, ....inspired design with great soul and grace.
I acquired a Marantz 10b from the original owner and sent it to Audio Classics a couple years ago for inspection and repair.  It operates without flaw and sounds amazing.  
Springbok10- a 3 story whip antenna? Now you’ve gotten me curious. Can you share details please? 
Not a great tuner, but a cool Deco radio for sale in my area....I have one so I thought I would share...hopefully this is within the rules.

https://dubuque.craigslist.org/ele/d/dubuque-1946-windsor-bullet-model/7087961060.html
I'm using a McIntosh MR-77, but I only listen to NPR with it.  There are no music stations here with reasonable programming or sound quality.
Mac MR-67, Accuphase T-100, Sansui TU-9900 and Mitsubishi DA-F20 - all superb with a whip antenna 3 stories high,pointing to a great classical station in CT and WQXR in NYC - the MR 67 rules with incredible sound, but the Accuphase  and Sansui not far behind.
The MR 67 is serviced by Audio Classics every few years.
one of these is on during our waking hours daily. We never know, when the MR is playing, whether it’s a CD or the tuner - until an announcer speaks. 
Follow-up to my earlier post:  I have been looking on Craigslist at a NAD 4225 ($50) or a Luxnan T111 ($75). I didn't want to spend much, as I don't listen much to radio outside my car. Others here noted the Luxnan T110 as a good tuner, but this is a T111 and the only info. I found on it was negative. The NAD didnt seem to impress either.  This morning, I drove over to buy a Fisher tuner the guy asked $20 for, but he said it just stopped going into stereo so he just gave it to me. Thought I might fiddle with it and see what it will do.
I use an Accuphase T-100, a Sansui TU-9900, and a Sansui TU-717. All are really enjoyable to listen to, but I like the 9900 best, there's just something about its sound (once it gets warmed up well) that makes it stand out. I'd like to be able to hook up an outdoor antenna, but I live in an HOA community and that's not allowed. The dearth of good FM stations and programming
makes it difficult to use them to their full potential. The tactile aspect is a big part of the FM tuner experience, using the big tuning knobs to zero in on the station.
I have a MR-78, a Marantz 20B, and a Pioneer TX-9500II. The Pioneer is a bit beat up and never had the handsome looks of the Marantz or the McIntosh, but I think it sounds the best (and is obviously the best value.) That said, the MR-78 is the one in my main system.
I have a Sansui TU-919 and a Mitsubishi DA-F20, purchased based on the tuner shootout rankings. I got the Mitsubishi first because the price was right and I had Mitsubishi equipment back in the day, excellent tuner. HOWEVER, everything they said about the Sansui TU-919 is dead on: if you're fortunate to live close enough to a good college station that doesn't compress their music (mine pulled in Princeton University from 32 miles away in PA), the dynamic range and sound quality is right up there with SACD.
Buy one, they're worth it. Mine had some scuffs on the top, but when music sounds this good you listening with your eyes closed anyway  ;-)
I purchased a Meridian 504 tuner but honestly haven't gotten to hook it up yet.
Maybe now with this Corona virus confinement, I'll get to finish the configuration of our system (Meridian 800, Meridian 861v8, Meridian HD621, Oppo UDP205 front end).
More significantly, here's a website that compares tuners:
https://www.fmtunerinfo.com/shootouts.html#504
For some reason, this comes up close to the Meridian 504 tuner review but if you scroll up to the top of the page you'll get to the start of this comparison.
Hope everyone enjoys this site - I have, many times :-)
I am a bit surprised so very few people talk about Accuphase, except 1 or 2 Who had  the oldest ones like the 100 or 101.
 I never tried one myself but know the have a good (at least) réputation for building tunersAre their clients for tuners mainly Japanese or Far East customers ?
Interesting timing on this subject...I just trotted out my old Pioneer TX-9500 II that I bought used years ago...great FM of course, I was going to try out different AM antenna options to see what happens...not expecting much...AM is almost ALL about antennas...but what the heck...got an unused analog input on my NAD 758 so we'll see...
I have a Marantz 2265B I bought back in the early eighties and use it to this day. I bought the Audio enginge B1 and I've connected it the reciver via RCA  So now I connect the B1 to my Samsung S8 phone by bluetooth and listen to streaming to my hearts content 
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.
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 . 
My MR80 (McIntosh) is (i think) over 25 years old and still pulls in the stations
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.
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. 
Richard M did his RIMO filter Mod to my MX-110 Z
his work thru Audio Classics very highly recommendable for those w Tube Mac tuners to keep running top notch 
My Tandberg 3001A programmable FM tuner needs a new home.  My listening has shifted online.  
A very heavily modded Sansui TU-717 and a Dyna FM 5 very modded by Frank Van Alstine. Both are terrific. The roof mounted APS-9B antenna , low loss balun, and RG-11 cable all help too. 
Over the years......

Lux T110, Tandberg 3012, 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).

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.
how about an SAE MK VIII?  The problem is that the nixie tubes have gradually gone out and there is no way to determine what station you are tuned to.
I use a highly regarded Harman Kardon Citation 18 tuner. Works very well, looks great and the build quality is mil spec. Introduced in 1977 for $595.00 and only sold in very limited numbers for 2 years. I lucked out and found mine on CL, the owner had just done a recap on the plug in boards, was moving so sold it very cheaply. It was a lucky find to say the least.
BillWojo

I have owned many tuners over the years, but my favorites are my present three:  Mac MR71 and Marantz 10B, both recently refurbished by Richard Modafferi, who did an amazing job.  (When he opened up my MR71, he discovered that he had performed work on it in 2000, some years before I owned it!)  I also use an MR78 that I purchased slightly second-hand in 1978.  It has had only a light tune-up to replace some lights, etc., in all that time, and it still sounds amazing.  These are great units that provide spectacular sound reproduction; I haven't found anything with today's technology that compares.
I'm listening to a Nakamichi ST-7 in my basement system. Not really high-end but it still sounds really good with the only NPR/classical  stations that are worth listening to in my area (WGUC and WVXU). Using a really cheap wire dipole on the wall I get 4 out of 4 bars on the strength display. Upstairs the built-in tuner of my Marantz 8805 prepro is surprisingly good hooked up to my attic space FM dipole. The advantage of the Marantz is that I can get internet radio, and so of course there is a huge choice there. SQ of internet radio is very spotty, but the BBC and Classic FM feeds sound quite good. In any case both of my FM options sound better than a Marantz ST59 tuner I bought in the late 90s to feed my Sony preamp back then.
I had a McIntosh MR 7082 tuner for about 30 years but I did not care for it requiring batteries to store frequencies and the difficulty with the frequency display. I fixed it up and sold it cheap to someone who could completely rebuild it and replaced it with a Magnum Dynalab Ft 101. I put up three directional FM antennas with RCA RF preamplifiers on towers and connected these to an antenna selector switch for each of the concert music stations in distant cities. This combination gives me the best sensitivity in most weather conditions I can afford. 
"I got lucky and located a NOS McIntosh MR-67 FM tuner."
Talk about lucky...excellent score. NEVER seen a listing for a NOS Mac tubed tuner.

My 1965 MR71 has been seeing overtime lately. If one can't have a Marantz 10B or the rare REL,  a Mac or Scott are probably the "best" tubed units still available.
I got lucky and located a NOS McIntosh MR-67 FM tuner.  I restored the power supply -- up-graded the discriminator, Multiplex board, and audio section with parts such as stacked-film polycarbonate capacitors, Teflon capacitors, and modern Roderstein metal-film resistors, and the like.  The sound I have been getting from this vintage yet text-book FM tuner is as good as the FM station broadcasting.  I mean that in some cases it is as good as a good CD.  Before that I had a Magnum Dynalab Tuner -- that by direct comparison with the MR-67 was, in my opinion, a piece of junk.  The MR-67 design followed the established standards of the original FM stereo patents.  NICE!!!