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- Newsgroups: rec.audio
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!news.umbc.edu!math9.math.umbc.edu!rouben
- From: rouben@math9.math.umbc.edu (Rouben Rostamian)
- Subject: Re: Info about receivers
- Message-ID: <1992Dec25.052439.3865@umbc3.umbc.edu>
- Sender: newspost@umbc3.umbc.edu (News posting account)
- Organization: University of Maryland Baltimore Campus
- References: <1992Dec24.231602.54895@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 1992 05:24:39 GMT
- Lines: 73
-
- In article <1992Dec24.231602.54895@watson.ibm.com> kaul@bacchus.watson.ibm.com (Anil Kaul) writes:
- >I'm in the market for a receiver and am willing to spend
- >around $300. I would appreciate any suggestions on what makes/models
- >to consider.
-
- I can tell you about my experience with my two receivers in the $300 price
- range. One, a 10 year old Akai AA-R32 (rated at 50W/channel) and the other
- a one year old Nikko NR1050 (rated at 110W/channel.) I love the Akai and
- dislike the Nikko. These models are almost surely not available anymore,
- but you may find the description of features and shortcomings below to
- be of some use as you shop around.
-
- I honestly cannot tell the difference between their sound reproduction
- quality and reception abilities. They both work and sound as you
- would expect of receivers in this class; that is, quite satisfactory.
- Their features are a different story.
-
- The Akai is a piece of art. The display and the controls layout are the
- most logical I have seen in any receiver -- and I have seen many receivers.
- If I were to buy a new receiver and if I could find one like it, I would
- buy it again. The fluorescent display panel shows a schematic wiring
- diagram of the current status of the receiver. If you are playing
- tape deck #2, it shows a cassette tape labeled 2, connected to an amplifier,
- connected to tone control unit, connected to a subsonic filter, connected
- to speaker A (or B, or both, as the case may be.) As you change the
- settings, say if you play the radio, the diagram changes accordingly.
-
- Other features that I consider valuable, are:
- o present buttons to select AM and FM stations, eight of each.
- o present tone controls which you can recall, two settings plus flat.
- o mono/stereo switch
-
- One shortcoming: You can dub from tape 1 to tape 2 but not vice versa.
-
- The Nikko's display, on the other hand, looks as complicated as a Boeing
- 767's dashboard. As technophile as I am, I still have to refer to the
- manual, after a year of owning the thing, to understand what certain
- buttons do. When it is on, its face lights up like a Christmas tree
- with a clutter of badly laid out red, green, amber bouncing and
- blinking LEDs. This is not bad in itself, but what is an unforgivable
- lapse, is that the damn thing does not have a permanent memory!
- You set the balance and tone controls in your favorite position,
- switch the unit off and on, and all controls have returned to
- their neutral setting :-( After a while you don't bother setting
- the controls anymore.
-
- Another sore point: The tuner indicator window, that is, the part
- of the display that shows which station you are tuned to, is deeply
- recessed, therefore you cannot see it unless you look directly into
- the recessed area. This means that unless you place the receiver at
- the eye level, you will have to bend each time you want to read the
- setting.
-
- One redeeming feature: You can dub from tape 1 to tape 2, or tape 2
- to tape 1, once you figure out how to work the controls.
-
- Another redeeming feature: It has a remote control, while Akai doesn't.
- I use the Nikko in my bedroom, where I can control it with the remote
- while in bed. (Needless to say, 110W/channel is an overkill in a bedroom,
- unless you have some strange kinky habbits.)
-
- An aside: I leave in a suburban area where FM radio signals are
- weak, so the reception is not ideal. When I shared this with an audio
- store salesman, he talked me into buying a Dennon receiver for its
- superior receiving characteristics. I do not recall which model
- it was, but I paid around $500 for it. When I brought it home and
- compared it side-by-side with the Akai, it became clear that the Dennon
- had even a greater difficulty receiving some of the weak stations than
- the Akai. So I quickly returned it for a refund.
-
-
- --
- Rouben Rostamian
-