Remember the glory days of watching and re-watching Jurassic Park III on the Sony DVD player you bought back in 2001? Or how about the year you invested in that Denon 5.1 receiver for your new speaker ...
You can’t doubt the appeal of vintage audio equipment, especially stereo receivers. With their giant metal knobs, faux-wood paneling and glow-up facades, they have a unique cool factor that modern ...
I'll be completely honest here: I know very, very little about this stuff. A friend traded me "a few bits of old audio equipment" for a big hard drive I had laying around.<BR><BR>... few bits my rear ...
Whether you're a decades-long hi-fi fan, new to this hobby, or have unearthed a trove of stereo equipment from your attic, the question will inevitably come up: what do you do with old hi-fi products?
We independently review everything we recommend. We may get paid to link out to retailer sites, and when you buy through our links, we may earn a commission. Learn more› By Brent Butterworth Brent ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... In a society enamored by the next newest thing, there are still people who like their books on paper, prefer their thank-you notes handwritten, would rather ...
My wife and I downsized in our move from New York to Florida several years ago. I had a workshop/lab in the old house that wouldn’t have any space in the new one. So, I recycled boxes and boxes of old ...
We love our devices—our TVs, laptops, tablets, and perhaps most of all, our mobile phones, those pocket-sized miracles of computing power. In fact, Gartner, a tech research company, estimates that ...
My ecoustics colleagues and I often field questions about why we like vintage audio gear or prefer it to modern equipment. Let us explain why. “Most old turntables are also sub-par performance-wise.
There’s still plenty of useful hardware out there that uses an RS-232 interface, like the Behringer Ultradrive loudspeaker systems that [Lasse Lukkari] works with from time to time. Rather than ditch ...