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Thanks so much for your help Great suggestions last questions Does it make sense to replace electrolytics based solely on the age the tuner sonics withstanding (the tuner works and sounds good)What is the difference between fixed and variable setting which should I be plugging into
On the other hand, great techs like Mike Zuccaro think that replacing caps just for the hell of it is a great waste of time. IOW, if it ain't broke, don't fix it. I've heard this story time and time again here at the AC and other places, and the fact is, most of the tinkering will result in a lesser performing component.Mike, BTW is a Macintosh approved tech in the San Diego area, and is highly regarded. In fact, I dare say replacing caps in vintage equipment is one of his pet peeves.I certainly enjoy my mint and very original Marants 115B tuner. It has stability, has a great ability to capture distant stations and sounds very musical.The even funner thing is they look cool too and you don't have to stick another penny into them.Wayner
mike is a great tech, but i would never send anything to him. because he is completely mistaken regarding replacing 40 year old 'lytics and installing upgraded caps and other parts. my rht-10 was sounding mighty fine, w/good reception before i had it worked on. little did i know how good it could really sound, and how good its reception really was. i found out when i got it back. way too many folks have had this exact experience w/their tunas. the fact is that having a tuna worked on by a qualified tech will only improve it, unless it is in perfect 100% shape to begin with. and even then, mods will help, if the tech knows what he's doing. (don't, btw, ever send anything to don scott - he's a hack and is absolutely clueless when it comes to knowing about how to properly refurb a tuna - i have known of many tunas sent to real techs to undo some of his travesties.)wayner, your 115 will absolutely sound better if you have it refurb'd and modded by a competent tech. ABSOLUTELY.ymm not vdoug s.
Name(s) and contact info of competent tech(s), please....any in NY City/ Boston proximity?Thanks,Munosmario
ken bernacky is in connecticut; while i have never used him, many satisfied folks over on the yahoo tuna forum have used him:http://www.stereosurgeons.com/here's a list of others, a couple close to you (ken is also listed here):http://www.fmtunerinfo.com/index.html#repairsalso, give romy the cat a holler - he is big time into fm, w/a sansui tu-x1 and a rhode & schwarz ballempfanger receiver and matching mpx decoder. he lives in boston, and may know someone worth checking out. (he is also into audio seriously big time; he is wery opinionated, and he has lotsa wery expensive gear. he insists live broadcast on fm will surpass any other source for realism. he is also a total trip; his way of distorting the english language is really off-putting, or a hoot, depending on your perspective. but, he is really into fm, and if you query him, he should have some info. tho he may tell you to throw your worthless tuna into the garbage. http://www.goodsoundclub.com/(fm page):http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowForum.aspx?ForumID=36hth,doug s.
Doug is advising how to get the most bang for your buck. That sometimes requires an investment. (snip)
Doug is advising how to get the most bang for your buck. That sometimes requires an investment.(snip)
Those are contradictory statements.
Outside of the bickering, this has been a good thread. Know any good tuner techs in or near Texas? One of these days, a Sherwood will come my way from ebay, and the plan is to have it brought up to speed. Scott
Where did this thread come from?