Author Topic: McIntosh article  (Read 425 times)

David Houck

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McIntosh article
« on: February 04, 2022, 01:39:05 PM »

rv_bass

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #1 on: February 04, 2022, 03:24:19 PM »
Thanks, David, now I want a McIntosh amp!  :)

David Houck

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #2 on: February 04, 2022, 07:01:46 PM »
After reading the article, went to the McIntosh website.  The speakers look nice too.   :)

rv_bass

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #3 on: February 05, 2022, 05:11:10 AM »
:)

edwin

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #4 on: February 25, 2022, 11:07:00 PM »
Almost three years ago, a friend gifted me his father's C33 and MC2255. The amp works wonderfully (although I did have to clean the pots and switches and replace the lamps) but the C33 had channel balance problems and a slightly distorted sound. I took it first to a local musical amplifier/keyboard repair guy who did a stellar job on rebuilding the MC2105 that the MC2255 replaced. He did a little work on it, but it was outside of his area of expertise. Next, I took it to the Denver Mac Authorized repair place. The guy swore he fixed it, which was completely insulting to my ability to hear (and look at the meters with a mono signal). The recording bus worked, but that meant I needed to use an external volume control. I was on AudioKarma talking about an MR74 tuner I acquired for cheap that I finally assumed was a boat anchor and someone mentioned a tech up in Fort Collins, CO who had worked on McIntosh gear for 50 years. I took both items to him and within about 10 days, he had the C33 fixed (just picked it up yesterday!), and charged me the insanely tiny sum of $90. The tuner has a problem with an FM IC which hasn't been made in years. I might be able to find one, but he nonchalantly said that he could build the equivalent out of discrete components if we couldn't find one. He's a gem of a human being and so incredibly knowledgeable and now my stereo sounds fantastic. Vandersteen 2ci speakers (or Avalon NP2s). I have others, too. I seem to be a McIntosh magnet.


After almost three years, it's now all working and the Lester Grinspoon Memorial Listening Station is fully operational (You can look him up. He was a very interesting person and I'm honored to have his stereo. His son, David is an astrobiologist who grew up with Carl Sagan around the house, a funky guitar player and a big Deadhead. Amazing family).




lbpesq

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #5 on: February 25, 2022, 11:29:45 PM »
I served with Lester on the NORML Board of Directors.  Amazing man.  Carl Sagan was “Mr. X” , the regular cannabis user, in Lester’s groundbreaking book “Marihuana Reconsidered”.

Bill, tgo
« Last Edit: February 26, 2022, 01:39:09 AM by lbpesq »

edwin

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #6 on: February 26, 2022, 09:17:50 AM »
I served with Lester on the NORML Board of Directors.  Amazing man.  Carl Sagan was “Mr. X” , the regular cannabis user, in Lester’s groundbreaking book “Marihuana Reconsidered”.

Bill, tgo

I should have known that you would have known him! More folks from my hometown of Newton MA (I went to elementary school with Jeremy Sagan, who in jr. high had the coolest hollow body Telecaster with humbuckers.)!

David Houck

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #7 on: February 26, 2022, 07:50:01 PM »
Thanks for sharing that story Edwin; and congrats on getting your system together.  Happy listening!

edwin

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #8 on: March 06, 2022, 10:27:38 PM »
Thanks for sharing that story Edwin; and congrats on getting your system together.  Happy listening!

Thanks! Now I'm trying to get together a perfect cassette deck to transfer all my old tapes to digital. I seem to have collected a number of them, but I'm trying to figure out how to pick one and make it sound as good as possible. Nakamichi fans are even more picky and arcane than McIntosh!

lbpesq

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #9 on: March 07, 2022, 01:01:09 AM »
Back in the day I loved my Sony Pro Walkman.   I believe I still have it lying around somewhere and I’ll bet it still works!

Bill, tgo

rv_bass

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #10 on: March 07, 2022, 03:40:57 AM »
I still have a dual cassette JVC deck, and a Sony D-5. :)

keith_h

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #11 on: March 07, 2022, 08:01:19 AM »
iI still have my old Denon cassette deck packed away somewhere. It wouldn't be a bad idea if I were to dig out my old tapes too. I have the full 1978 Monterey Jazz Festival on tape that I recorded off an FM simulcast when I lived SoCal that I haven't listened to in years. I really should get it to digital before the tapes become unplayable. Which reminds me I really need to get back to transferring my dad's old 8mm films to digital.

StephenR

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #12 on: March 07, 2022, 08:35:27 AM »

Thanks! Now I'm trying to get together a perfect cassette deck to transfer all my old tapes to digital. I seem to have collected a number of them, but I'm trying to figure out how to pick one and make it sound as good as possible. Nakamichi fans are even more picky and arcane than McIntosh!

I have Nakamichi ZX-9 but never got it repaired when the belt went about 15 years ago. I was a big Nak fan, all my decks were Naks. First one was a 500, the one with the small built in mixer that could make binaural recordings. That was such a great deck I really wish I had kept it for live music taping since you could mix a stereo feed with three mics. I sold it to my girlfriend of the time and got a 680(?). There were a couple of features that never quite worked and I was back and forth to the Nak repair facility on LI enough times that I got to know the guy who ran the facility pretty well. As the warranty period was about to expire Craig was nice enough to replace it with a NOS unit still sealed in a box. I wanted a functional Nak so I asked Craig which model came back for servicing the least, he looked over the incoming service logs and what they had it the shop and told me they were finding the ZX-9 to have the best service records. The Dragon was the model just above but they had a lot of those in the shop at the time so I went with a ZX-9.  Craig also told me that the ZX-9 was the deck Nakamichi used in it's recording labs. It was a great deck until the drive belt went. I doubt that I will ever fork out the cash to have it refurbished and would like to find a home for it at some point with someone who either wants to restore it or use it for parts, My wife has one of their cheaper decks that still works but is not currently hooked up.

Good luck getting your tapes transferred. I digitized a lot of the ones I really cared about years ago but still have a number that I would like to still transfer. Glad I got to the ones I found most important before the drive belt failed in my Nak.

cozmik_cowboy

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #13 on: March 07, 2022, 09:42:23 AM »
iI still have my old Denon cassette deck packed away somewhere. It wouldn't be a bad idea if I were to dig out my old tapes too. I have the full 1978 Monterey Jazz Festival on tape that I recorded off an FM simulcast when I lived SoCal that I haven't listened to in years. I really should get it to digital before the tapes become unplayable. Which reminds me I really need to get back to transferring my dad's old 8mm films to digital.

Make sure you copy them onto tape as well; always remember the archivist's mantra - "If it's not eye-readable, it's not preserved".  The one thing you can rely on in re digital is, digital files will corrupt.  Plus, digital platforms change faster than Joe Pass's picking, so if you want to keep your stuff, you'll need to migrate it frequently - with the associated risks. 


Peter
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keith_h

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Re: McIntosh article
« Reply #14 on: March 07, 2022, 10:18:07 AM »
iI still have my old Denon cassette deck packed away somewhere. It wouldn't be a bad idea if I were to dig out my old tapes too. I have the full 1978 Monterey Jazz Festival on tape that I recorded off an FM simulcast when I lived SoCal that I haven't listened to in years. I really should get it to digital before the tapes become unplayable. Which reminds me I really need to get back to transferring my dad's old 8mm films to digital.

Make sure you copy them onto tape as well; always remember the archivist's mantra - "If it's not eye-readable, it's not preserved".  The one thing you can rely on in re digital is, digital files will corrupt.  Plus, digital platforms change faster than Joe Pass's picking, so if you want to keep your stuff, you'll need to migrate it frequently - with the associated risks. 


Peter


Considering the original source and age of the tapes some loss from the analog to digital conversion probably won't be noticeable. It is something to think about if I ever get around to transferring my direct to disc and half speed master vinyl to digital.

You've not seen my antique personal computer museum. I started it for the very reason that so many things digital are tied to specific eras of computers. :) About of third of my career was designing and writing error recovery code for magnetic and optical storage devices on mainframe operating systems. A lot of folks don't know that much like magnetic storage optical degrades over time too but it would still last longer than the wood pulp based paper used today.