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stj
05-05-2005, 07:25 PM
I'm asking an earlier question differently.

If I attach a new pioneer universal player to a 25 year old stereo receiver, will I get the detailed sound produced by the player? Or are more advanced electronics also needed in the receiver?

matt39
05-06-2005, 12:15 AM
Hi stj,
I think that as long as your receiver is in good shape the new player would work fine. I have recently listened to several systems with vintage equipment paired with modern digital sources and they sounded very good to me. Good luck.

N. Abstentia
05-06-2005, 03:25 AM
Well there's no way to get digital 5.1 out of an old stereo receiver. The best you will do is 2 channel analog which will work fine for SACD and CD. It will work okay for DVD but you'll be missing out on the 5.1 sound.

Dolby
05-06-2005, 04:40 AM
Am I right in saying that SACD 'reproduces' very high frequencies that the ear cannot hear (behond the usual 20hz-20khz range), but gives the recording atmosphere and spacialness?

If this so, doesn't one require a newer amplifier and speakers that can handle this range?

stj
05-06-2005, 05:21 AM
Thanks for the responses. I'm most interested in listening to stereo so not having 5.1 is fine. We have two HTIBs and don't even have the surrounds set up. One aspect of the EX-500 elite was virtual surround, which would be nice.

I'm guessing that I can just hook up the left and right audio outputs to the receiver.

shokhead
05-06-2005, 05:48 AM
I was going to say that he should go with the analogs but he doesnt have anything else to use. LOL

N. Abstentia
05-06-2005, 04:07 PM
Am I right in saying that SACD 'reproduces' very high frequencies that the ear cannot hear (behond the usual 20hz-20khz range), but gives the recording atmosphere and spacialness?

If this so, doesn't one require a newer amplifier and speakers that can handle this range?

No, there's nothing a new amp can do that an old one can't. In fact, give me an old tube amp over any mid-fi reciever any day. IN FACT, add a good turntable to that and you'll blow away ANY mid priced CD/new amp combo you can think of.

SACD doesn't have any higher frequencies, it's got more resolution and higher sampling. Analog vinyl sound without the pops, clicks, and hiss :)

shokhead
05-06-2005, 08:02 PM
No, there's nothing a new amp can do that an old one can't. In fact, give me an old tube amp over any mid-fi reciever any day. IN FACT, add a good turntable to that and you'll blow away ANY mid priced CD/new amp combo you can think of.

SACD doesn't have any higher frequencies, it's got more resolution and higher sampling. Analog vinyl sound without the pops, clicks, and hiss :)

Whatever.

N. Abstentia
05-07-2005, 03:30 AM
Whatever.

You're saying an old amp can't reproduce the same frequencies as a new amp?

Explain yourself, young man.

shokhead
05-07-2005, 03:56 AM
My bad,i was thinking it was older but 80 isnt that old but no dig. connection so its more about the player. I was thinking it was older and wouldnt have more then 30 watts,maybe but we dont know anything other then 25 years old,right? Might be top of the line or an old Emerson. I worked in the audio section at Zodys in 71 and most was between 20 and 50 watts from what we carried.

stj
05-07-2005, 07:15 AM
The stereo receiver I am using is a Sherwood S9200CP. Speakers Energy C-5's.

I have not listened to SACD's but would like to be able to. This is why I wondered whether the Pioneer EX500, player receiver combo might be an inexpensive alternative to just getting a player. Can't find any reviews though.

That said, 90+% of the CD's I listen to will not be SACD. So, would something that states
it does 2X and 4X Cd upsampling make more sence? I'm going to start a new thread on this topic out of curiosity.

shokhead
05-07-2005, 07:55 AM
Why not a new receiver? Nice ones go for under 400 bucks.

Mark of Cenla
05-09-2005, 06:23 AM
I have a Panasonic DVD recorder that also plays DVD Audio discs. I play it through my mid-80s Hafler preamp and power amp in stereo. It sounds wonderful. Your old Sherwood may sound better than most new receivers. Peace.

shokhead
05-09-2005, 07:16 AM
I have a Panasonic DVD recorder that also plays DVD Audio discs. I play it through my mid-80s Hafler preamp and power amp in stereo. It sounds wonderful. Your old Sherwood may sound better than most new receivers. Peace.

And why might an old Sherwood sound better then new receivers?

Mark of Cenla
05-09-2005, 09:19 AM
Mostly because of better power supplies and much better overall construction. I am far from the only one to have such an opinion. Peace.

nightflier
05-09-2005, 10:56 AM
Why not a new receiver? Nice ones go for under 400 bucks....And why might an old Sherwood sound better then new receivers?

A "nice" receiver will set you back a lot more than $400. As long as STJ is sticking with analog stereo, a vintage receiver could very well have fuller sound than the thiner sound typical of computer-chip-generated sound from the sub $400 receivers out there.

As far as watts & sound go, I have a 1981 "vintage" Panasonic receiver at work (with the silver front, analog dials, and analog meters) that would probably look pretty out of place compared with a Sony all digital budget unit. But it cranks out 80W per channel and sounds fantastic (yes, in stereo, no digital, no remotes, no presets). It is powering a pair of also vintage and rather inneficient Pioneer speakers. It may not be hi-fi, but its sounds very good. Oh, and I almost forgot, we purchased a K-mart variety $20 DVD player to play music CD's and they also sound fine. I suppose that adding an Arcam CD player would be a substantial improvement, but that would be overkill, here.

N. Abstentia
05-09-2005, 11:31 AM
My bad,i was thinking it was older but 80 isnt that old but no dig. connection so its more about the player. I was thinking it was older and wouldnt have more then 30 watts,maybe but we dont know anything other then 25 years old,right? Might be top of the line or an old Emerson. I worked in the audio section at Zodys in 71 and most was between 20 and 50 watts from what we carried.

Let's not forget..watts is not everything. Most people don't even realize that they will never use over 15 watts, and these same people are anal about requiring that they have the latest amplifier because it's 110 wpc instead of the old outdated 100 wpc model. I have to just laugh at these people!

Also, let's not forget that a 15 watt tube amp will actually be much much louder than a 15 watt transistor amp, so in fact an old 40 watt tube amp could very well blow away a modern budget amp rated at 100 watts per channel...because for one thing the budget amp will in reality maybe be 30 watts per channel plus it's transistor.

stj
05-09-2005, 03:20 PM
Let's not forget..watts is not everything. Most people don't even realize that they will never use over 15 watts, and these same people are anal about requiring that they have the latest amplifier because it's 110 wpc instead of the old outdated 100 wpc model. I have to just laugh at these people!

Also, let's not forget that a 15 watt tube amp will actually be much much louder than a 15 watt transistor amp, so in fact an old 40 watt tube amp could very well blow away a modern budget amp rated at 100 watts per channel...because for one thing the budget amp will in reality maybe be 30 watts per channel plus it's transistor.


Maybe I shouldn't overlook some of the new recievers by Onkyo and Pioneer that only deliver 75-80 wpc at 6 0hms. The specs and price are tempting, but I had wondered If they would have enough power to drive my Energy C-5's. Sounds like they might.