Slosh
03-04-2011, 05:18 AM
A quick story here.
My girlfriend's receiver died so I thought I'd be a nice guy and give her my vintage Superscope (ie Marantz) quad receiver that I had in my garage system. She just bought a new car last week so money is a little tight for her at the moment. As expected the Superscope sounds so much better than her old JVC receiver it replaced. I was a little sad to see the Superscope go but the truth is I will listen to it far more at her house than I ever did in my garage so it all works out in the end.
So now I needed a replacement receiver or integrated amp for my garage, but since I'm running $6.00 thrift-shop Baby Advent speakers I don't want to spend any money. :) The only receiver my local thrift-shop had that day was a Vector Research VR-2200A. I never heard of Vector Research before and to be honest I thought it looked like a white-van special. But I looked at it anyway. It has the spring-clip speaker connectors typical of cheap '80s receivers but underneath it said 4 ohm nominal impedance minimum instead of the typical 8 ohm rating. Hmmm. . . . . so maybe this isn't the POS I thought it was. They didn't have any speakers at the store to try it out with but all the LEDs worked and the controls operated smoothly and it wasn't even dusty inside so for $10 I said why not? Got it home and no sound. $1.00 worth of fuses was all it took to bring it back to life.
Damn, it actually sounds pretty nice. The bottom end is noticeably deeper and punchier than the Superscope. The mids and top end is a little smoother with the Superscope but all in all the VR still sounds very nice. Not a whole lot of power (I'm guessing 20 wpc based on the model number and weight) but still plenty loud for my garage.
After a little internet digging I come to find out VR was the house-brand for Tech Hi Fi and their receivers and integrated amps were well regarded for budget gear. Then I come across a picture of this Rotel 403 receiver and can't help but notice how similar it is to my newly acquired VR-2200A. Even the back panel is the same. Of course the Rotel has a nicer faceplate and a wooden case, and presumably better internal components, but it would explain why this little VR receiver sounds as good as it does.
When I opened up the case to replace the fuses all of the internals looked pretty generic to me. What do you think: a cheaper rebadged Rotel or just wishful thinking?
http://i432.photobucket.com/albums/qq41/Slosh_album/VR2200A001.jpg
My girlfriend's receiver died so I thought I'd be a nice guy and give her my vintage Superscope (ie Marantz) quad receiver that I had in my garage system. She just bought a new car last week so money is a little tight for her at the moment. As expected the Superscope sounds so much better than her old JVC receiver it replaced. I was a little sad to see the Superscope go but the truth is I will listen to it far more at her house than I ever did in my garage so it all works out in the end.
So now I needed a replacement receiver or integrated amp for my garage, but since I'm running $6.00 thrift-shop Baby Advent speakers I don't want to spend any money. :) The only receiver my local thrift-shop had that day was a Vector Research VR-2200A. I never heard of Vector Research before and to be honest I thought it looked like a white-van special. But I looked at it anyway. It has the spring-clip speaker connectors typical of cheap '80s receivers but underneath it said 4 ohm nominal impedance minimum instead of the typical 8 ohm rating. Hmmm. . . . . so maybe this isn't the POS I thought it was. They didn't have any speakers at the store to try it out with but all the LEDs worked and the controls operated smoothly and it wasn't even dusty inside so for $10 I said why not? Got it home and no sound. $1.00 worth of fuses was all it took to bring it back to life.
Damn, it actually sounds pretty nice. The bottom end is noticeably deeper and punchier than the Superscope. The mids and top end is a little smoother with the Superscope but all in all the VR still sounds very nice. Not a whole lot of power (I'm guessing 20 wpc based on the model number and weight) but still plenty loud for my garage.
After a little internet digging I come to find out VR was the house-brand for Tech Hi Fi and their receivers and integrated amps were well regarded for budget gear. Then I come across a picture of this Rotel 403 receiver and can't help but notice how similar it is to my newly acquired VR-2200A. Even the back panel is the same. Of course the Rotel has a nicer faceplate and a wooden case, and presumably better internal components, but it would explain why this little VR receiver sounds as good as it does.
When I opened up the case to replace the fuses all of the internals looked pretty generic to me. What do you think: a cheaper rebadged Rotel or just wishful thinking?
http://i432.photobucket.com/albums/qq41/Slosh_album/VR2200A001.jpg