What piece of equipment started it all for you?

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daddyjt
daddyjt Posts: 3,198
The broken Sony DVD player thread got me thinking about this in a roundabout way. I really haven’t owned much Sony gear (I’ve just always seemed to find something that worked better for my needs).

BUT… my first pair of “real” speakers were a pair of Sony SS TL1 that I bought shortly after I got married in 1990 for $169 (I had to put them on lay a way!). Prior to those, I had a pair of Realistic (Radio Shack) Minimus 7 that sound surprisingly good (I still use them on my electronics bench).

Back to the Sonys - even with only a 6.5” woofer, the “transmission line” enclosure provided awesome bass, and they had fantastic detail - I was hooked on home audio from that moment on.

What piece of gear started your journey? *note - this thread isn’t intended to showcase your most awesome piece of gear - it’s more about “humble beginnings”…:-)

These aren’t mine, but I have some photos somewhere - I’ll see if I can dig them out. For now, heres a stock photo

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“Human beings are born with different capacities. If they are free, they are not equal. And if they are equal, they are not free.”
― Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

Comments

  • CGTIII
    CGTIII Posts: 1,266
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    Dad's Sansui receiver (800?) that he brought back from Okinawa. Wish I had it.
    Expect that there will be bumps in the road. Choose to not let them rattle you.

    Polk - Monitor 10As, SDA 2Bs, LSi9s, White RTi4s, S4s, M3s, various centers.
    Boston - CR7, CR6s, CR4s.
    Subs - M&K V4, M&K VX-7B, JBL SUB150P, Jamo Sub 250, and others.
    ​Thompson Adventures, Inc.
  • Emlyn
    Emlyn Posts: 4,886
    edited July 1
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    My first real turntable was a sort of programmable Pioneer linear tracking model I got on closeout from the Base Exchange at Robinson Barracks in Germany. I think the model was PL-L50.

    This is not my video, but the same turntable:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSXb0MXimPs
  • motorstereo
    motorstereo Posts: 2,398
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    First things first; a 50cc Honda Cub at 13 yo kickstarted my 55+ year love affair with 2 wheels long before my GE Wildcat and it's ceramic cart came along to destroy my budding record collection. :)

    rasq2vn1vhkf.png
  • pitdogg2
    pitdogg2 Posts: 27,645
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    A Yamaha AX900 and a set of Cerwin Vega D7's.......
    It took me 2 years to pay off the loan B)
  • gudnoyez
    gudnoyez Posts: 8,195
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    Marantz Reciever, Marantz cassette, Technics turntable. and some Cerwin Vegas. I still have the turntable with a new stylus on an ortofon cartridge new belts on the Marantz cassette deck.
    Home Theater
    Parasound Halo A 31 OnkyoTX-NR838 Sony XBR55X850B 55" 4K RtiA9 Fronts CsiA6 Center RtiA3 Rears FxiA6 Side Surrounds Dual Psw 111's Oppo 105D Signal Ultra Speaker Cables & IC's Signal Magic Power Cable Technics SL Q300 Panamax MR4300 Audioquest Chocolate HDMI Cables Audioquest Forest USB Cable

    2 Channel
    Adcom 555II Vincent SA-T1 Marantz SA 15S2 Denon DR-M11 Clearaudio Bluemotion SDA 2.3tl's (Z) edition MIT Terminator II Speaker Cables & IC's Adcom 545II Adcom Gtp-450 Marantz CD5004 Technics M245X SDA 2B's, SDA CRS+

    Stuff for the Head
    JD LABS C5 Headphone Amplifier, Sennheiser HD 598, Polk Audio Buckle, Polk Audio Hinge, Velodyne vPulse, Bose IE2, Sennheiser CX 200 Street II, Sennheiser MX 365

    Shower & Off the beaten path Rigs
    Polk Audio Boom Swimmer, Polk Audio Urchin B)
  • msg
    msg Posts: 10,566
    edited July 1
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    First things first; a 50cc Honda Cub at 13 yo kickstarted my 55+ year love affair with 2 wheels long before my GE Wildcat and it's ceramic cart came along to destroy my budding record collection. :)

    rasq2vn1vhkf.png
    @Nightfall !
    I disabled signatures.
  • izafar
    izafar Posts: 822
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    -izafar

    Goldenear Technology Triton 1 - Benchmark AHB2 - Benchmark LA4 - Auralic Vega - Auralic Aries Mini - Marantz TT-15S1 - Clearaudio Nano
  • PSOVLSK
    PSOVLSK Posts: 5,414
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    I made the 2 hour drive from my hometown to Dallas in about 1990 if I recall correctly to get a Kenwood receiver and a pair of Kenwood speakers from Circuit City. I don’t remember the model number of either, but they got me hooked. My first “real” system that I bought with my own money.

    Here’s the stereo it replaced. A Christmas gift from my parents when I was probably 12 or so.
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    Things work out best for those who make the best of the way things work out.-John Wooden
  • mhardy6647
    mhardy6647 Posts: 35,422
    edited July 2
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    EICO HF-52 mono integrated amplifier. push-pull EL34 (Mullards) with excellent Chicago output iron.
    Wish I still had it. Indeed, wish I had two of them.
    we6te7g4r2rz.jpg

    EDIT: The big, beautifully ugly EICO was a hand-me-down from my father (scavenged from a church PA system upgrade he had done). Paired it with my parents' old VM changer (ca. 1958) which I had outfitted with a Pickering PAC-1 (IIRC) cartridge and a single Electrovoice LS-12 fullrange driver in a cabinet my father had built in the 1950s. Still have the LS-12 in its original EV box (ditched the cabinet somewhere along the line).

  • mantis
    mantis Posts: 17,616
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    I grew up in a family who were mostly all musicians. I also grew up in a family who shopped at Bryn Mawr Stereo and Video. My family was huge on records and always having a nice stereo to play music. My Grandfather was a TV repair man as a side business, he ran the Steel Mill in Fairless Hills PA.

    So when I was like 6 or 7 , I got my first kid Turntable. It played 45's. When I got to about 8 or 9 , I got my first actual stereo system. This system played full size 33 records , had a 8 track built in and it was made by Fisher.

    As far as the first piece of equipment that really got me going was my Uncle's Polk Audio Monitor 2b's and a Yamaha Receiver. We would go over his house and mostly all I wanted to do if I wasn't playing his Drum kit or Piano was to sit down and listen to records. Even at a very young age , I really liked how damn good it sounded and how much better it was than my Fisher system I had in my bedroom.

    My parents had a pretty nice all separate system in Technics , separate Turntable and 8 track player. Later a Tape Deck was installed. My parents had the Panasonic Thrush speakers and a pair of JBL speakers with the foam cubes on the front of it. I loved those grills. They came in different colors L100's I think they were. They came out with a MK II version of these speakers years ago. They are pretty special speakers. I grew up listening to the originals along with the Panasonic Thrush speakers which I think where a direct competator. I liked them both honestly but the Polks I liked even more. I loved the small lean back stands they were on, I loved the silver look and green display of the Technics.

    I started doing this hobby as a professional back in 1999 when I was a Certified Nissan and GM Technician and had no idea this was even a job I could have. Crazy how all of this came about for me.
    Dan
    My personal quest is to save to world of bad audio, one thread at a time.
  • xschop
    xschop Posts: 5,680
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    My first real piece of equipment was a 30-30 Winchester lever action my grandpa gave to me. Eradicated a few pests out on his small ranch in Campwood Tx.
    Have you ever seen a jack-rabbit on peyote?
    Don't take experimental gene therapies from known eugenicists.
  • HzTweaker
    HzTweaker Posts: 1,082
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    It all started when my Mom's boss gave me his blown PolkAudio PSW50 under the conditions that I'd repair it myself. I tried to do so with original parts from Polk CS, but after receiving the first unit damaged and then the second driver damaged my young (I think I was 14 maybe 15yo) and impatient self got a refund from Polk CS. I took the money and bought a similar size bass tube from radio shack, used the driver from it and voila a fix sub. I used that for quite a long time in a decent 5.1 that I slowly pieced together with Bday/odd job money and Christmas presents before the amp finally bit the dust.

    The next wave was when I bought my Polk Monitor 10s and my vintage Kenwood receiver (as shown in my profile pic) ~11 yeas ago. That lead me down the rabbit hole to where my HiFi currently is posted in my signature now!
    2ch rig: Speakers: Magnepan LRS w/Magna Riser stands Preamplifier: Parasound P5 DAC: Fiio K13 Amplifier: Parasound A23 CDP: Pioneer DV-563A Cables: Wireworld Equinox 7 XLR ICs, Wireworld Ultraviolet 7 USB, AudioQuest Q2s, AudioQuest NRG X(preamp)

    Standby: LSi9s with VR3's Fortress mods
  • BlueBirdMusic
    BlueBirdMusic Posts: 2,953
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    It had to be my WEBCOR Festival FONIGRAF - Model 1852 Record Player that I received at Christmas in the late 1950's to early 1960's.

    Also, my father played a fiddle and I saw him call and square dance. (I can't dance.) It's strange too that an old acoustic guitar was in our house but no one ever played it until my brother played it in the late 1950's after learning to play the flute in elementary school.

    This is a picture of the original little booklet that came with the WEBCOR. I have saved it for many years. I do not have the record player.

    27baklgdpsp9.jpeg

    "Sometimes you have to look to the past to understand where you are going in the future"
    Harry / Marietta GA
  • pearsall001
    pearsall001 Posts: 5,367
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    Gotta go way back to 11/25/88!!

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    B&K ST 140 amp
    B&K PRO 5 preamp
    PRO-AC Studio 100's w/ stands
    Van Den Hull speaker cables

    I've been emptying my wallet ever since. LoL!!

    I even kept the original receipts!

  • rebelsoul
    rebelsoul Posts: 787
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    Dad gave me a carver 1.5 t / original time windows/
  • gmcman
    gmcman Posts: 1,865
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    Emlyn wrote: »
    My first real turntable was a sort of programmable Pioneer linear tracking model I got on closeout from the Base Exchange at Robinson Barracks in Germany.

    Long story and Interesting you mention this....to start, it's hard to pinpoint a certain piece of gear, but as a kid in grade school and jr high, I did like to take the time to record a cassette with the best SQ as I could... either from a 3.5mm patch cord, or using the mic near a speaker, so the passion was brewing.

    Around 1986 after Top Gun was released, I went into the speaker demo room at Robinson and they had the opening scene of "Top Gun" on LaserDisc using Carver components playing through some Bose 901's. I cannot comment on the overall SQ, but it was crazy loud and I was impressed with the Carver gear, but never owned any. I think that was my push into spending more time at the Audio Photo Club on Patch which was closer to our house. This was I believe the start into my hi-fi journey, anytime we went to RB I told my parents where they could find me.... B)

    I also want to say later on there was a Yamaha Centennial set at Robinson..the MX-10000 and CX-10000 on display there as well and that was really cool.

    We ended up with a Sony rack system and a pair of AR 48LS speakers, was an upgrade from what I was using and made many mix tapes with that system.



  • Butter
    Butter Posts: 11
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    When my brother came back from Vietnam, he brought back a nice system with a reel to reel player. I don’t remember any of the specifics but holy crap was that cool! About five years ago, my wife and I were going to an estate sale on half price day where I saw my Polk SDA one b’s. Just sitting there staring at me. And like I say it was half price day. They were in perfect condition and heavy as hell. I looked at my wife and said do you care? And she said, of course, not. Not realizing that I had just climbed down into a rabbit hole. 😂 and here I am.
  • SCompRacer
    SCompRacer Posts: 9,176
    edited July 10
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    When my brother came back from Vietnam.....

    GI's bought a lot of gear overseas at Post Exchange stores or during R&R in Tokyo. Fun fact, Doug Bradley, a Vietnam vet and co-author of We Gotta Get Out of This Place, said American GIs in Vietnam bought 178,000 reel to reel tape decks in 1969 and 1970. There are Vietnam vets in the forums that still have their decks, sometimes looking for help to keep them going. Top brands included Sony, Teac, Akai, Pioneer, and Sansui.

    The Teac 4010S was a popular one I'm familiar with. They were used for music and for recording letter tapes to send home and playing tapes from home.

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    Post edited by SCompRacer on
    Salk SoundScape 8's * Audio Research Reference 3 * Bottlehead Eros Phono * Park's Audio Budgie SUT * Krell KSA-250 * Harmonic Technology Pro 9+ * Signature Series Sonore Music Server w/Deux PS * Roon * Gustard R26 DAC / Singxer SU-6 DDC * Heavy Plinth Lenco L75 Idler Drive * AA MG-1 Linear Air Bearing Arm * AT33PTG/II & Denon 103R * Richard Gray 600S * NHT B-12d subs * GIK Acoustic Treatments * Sennheiser HD650 *