Audiophile Equipment


I learned the value of audiophile equipment early in my pursuit of the high end. I had accumulated enough gear for a system and was looking for the best possible tape deck… with Dolby C. From the popular magazines… Stereo ReviewStereo Times… the Harman Kardon T392 seemed to represent the pinnacle. So I bought one. It was OK… but such a huge step down from vinyl that I was genuinely bummed, especially since it cost something like $650… a lot of money at the time.

A few months later I was browsing a high-end audio shop and, somewhat morosely, told my story to a salesman. He just started laughing. “Those things are junk… you need a real tape deck.” He led me over to the window, where there was a seven-year-old used Nakamichi 1000… huge, with wood paneling all around it… looking more like a reel-to-reel than a cassette deck. He wanted $1,200 for it. That was an astronomical amount of money… and it was old. Then he said, “Take it home… try it.”

My first real jaw-drop moment.

It had the full depth and bass of vinyl… it was simply astonishing. It made the so-called “flagship” Harman Kardon sound like a cheap plastic transistor radio and without Dolby C.  All that glossy magazine talk about bandwidth and specs… page after page of marketing… well, that’s all it was. This old, purpose-built audiophile machine performed leagues above the consumer-level product.

I was hooked.

It wasn’t my last audiophile purchase… but it was my last consumer-level purchase for decades.

ghdprentice

your post brings back nice memories

i had a teac v9 and a pioneer 10 band equalizer, used them to make so many great sounding cassettes for my car... all my friends said my tapes sounded best as i properly equalized for the low and hi end loss, and thus created close to flat response curves at playback

remember when i bought my first lexus, the car was sooo quiet and listening to music on road trips was just heaven on earth!

later i got a nak zx9, it was just a beast of a machine i didn’t really didn’t think it sounded that much better than the trusty teac!

Thanks for the memory

I have mentioned my friend Wayne at Harvey's, NYC who called me when stuff was coming out of service to their small used shelf.

I got one of these, just because it was a beauty, and gave it to a friend. He has a small museum in his listening room, there it sits

 

I had and still have, still working an Onkyo ta-rw490, I actively made copies for others. I just found a small batch of high quality new blank tapes.

Not as good looking, but cassettes, made for dictation, came a long way, tiny 1/8" wide tape, the physics of the mechanism had to evolve, unlike 8 tracks which were never upgraded.

 

@elliottbnewcombjr 

That's it. I remember lugging it home. Unbelievable build quality. I eventually upgraded to the Nakamichi LX-5.