Altec Lansing 911A?


I bought an Altec Lansing 911 stereo system a few years ago. I dont use it much and would like to sell it and upgrade to a better TT. Problem is I cant find much information on them. Does anyone know about how much it is worth? It is in original working condition except for a crack in the dust cover. Im sure it will need some fine tuning but everything works great as far as I can tell.

Any feedback is appreciated,

Thanks
jlandrum
dunno what the AL911 is; maybe a compact?
Try asking about 1/3 to 1/4 of the purchase price if it's even worth that.
It is an "all in one" system with a Garrard 95B TT built into the top. By all in one I mean that the TT does not require a receiver or amp to drive the speakers. I believe that they were made by Altec in the early 70's.

I think Im going to stop by the dealer who sold it to me a few years ago and see what he will give me for trade in value towards a TT.
The Altec 911A was my first stereo! I bought it with my own money in 1972 as a sophomore in college.

Back when a decent 40 wpc receiver was $400, the 911A was a stone cold bargain. It integrated Altec's 44wpc 714 receiver ($400 MSRP) with the Garrard SL95B set into the top ($100) with a Shure M93E elliptical cartridge ($39.95) and a pair of their 887A Capri 8" 2-way acoustic suspension speakers ($180/pr). The SL95B was the top of Garrard's home line when this product came out (soon bumped to second by the Zero-100). It had a 11.5" platter when the Garrards below that had a 10". Everything in the 911A package was finished in real walnut and I bought mine new for $419. Adjusted for inflation, this "bargain" would be $2,124.88 today. Could you imagine a student paying his own way through college today spending that much for a stereo? Back then, though, it was like getting the turntable, cartridge, and speakers for $19. Every component was made in the USA or England (turntable). Altec also offered a 912A model which added a built-in Dolby cassette deck to the package. Those are *really* rare.

The one compromise in the design vs. the standalone 714 receiver was that the power supply was downsized to share space with the turntable's underpinnings. Where a real 714 made at least 44 wpc from 20-20KHz, the 911A fell to about 27 wpc at 20 Hz. I know because I had mine bench-tested at the audio store I worked a couple years later. The tuner, however, was absolutely superb and I'd stack it up against $500-600 receivers (at least) from Marantz and Kenwood at the time.

High Fidelity mag reviewed the 911A in their July 1971 issue. I think you can download the user's manual here.

As for value today, it depends a lot on the buyer. Although Marantz, Altec, and HK tried to elevate the format, the compact never got beyond the "beginner's audio" stigma propagated by Electrophonic, Longines Symphonette and the like. OTOH, the 911A is rare, both as a specific model and as a genre--high quality compact. The 911A was introduced in 1971 and was gone from the lineup before the 1975 catalog. My guess is that a vintage collector might be willing to pay a $200-400 for one in representative shape. Otherwise it might show up in a thrift or pawn shop for $20-100.