The Fisher 400 tube receiver may not be the easiest vintage amplifier to find, but it is well worth the effort to have it restored.

More and more people are discovering the outstanding sound, build quality and reliability of vintage hi-fi. Their popularity has risen steadily over the last decade and some are now priced far above their modern counterparts. With this blog, we want to give space to the excellent instruments of yesteryear. In these posts, we'll showcase the outstanding hi-fi, audiophile and high fidelity equipment of the 60s, 70s and 80s, equipment that still makes their owners proud today.
Yamaha NS-1000M loudspeaker
There's no such thing as the perfect loudspeaker, nor is there ever likely to be one. Most manufacturers don't even try – theirs is a volume business where the trick is to produce a good-sounding product at an affordable price. There's nothing wrong with this, as perfection can often be the enemy of the good. Yet sometimes hi-fi companies do...
Luxman L-30 Amplifier
The L-30 was the cheapest amplifier in Luxman's 1976 range. Not that it looked anything like a budget model – rather, it had an almost intangible feel of quality and superior finish that in terms of showroom appeal put it above all but the very best offerings from the Japanese big names at the time.
Samuel Johnson Audio
Abrand new company, Samuel Johnson was founded by a group of enthusiasts, most of whom had met through their work with a Scottish-based manufacturer of control systems for industrial applications and who discovered further common ground in a consuming interest in hi-fi.
Sony TA 1120a (Vintage)
Slightly quirky in both sound and ergonomics, here is an amplifier for the serious collector
Fisher AD 800 (Vintage)
The Sony-based electronics provide a distinctly 'Japanese' sound, instantly evocative of the early CD era
JVC UX-1 micro system
The first time I saw a JVC UX-1 it was pictured on the side of a bus. The image was part of an ad that carried the simple message 'All features, Great, and Small'. And this turned out to be true, for the UX-1 micro system had every function imaginable, sounded like 'proper' hi-fi and was tiny.
Dual CS 601 Turntable
Any mention of Dual turntables usually brings one of the many incarnations of the company's CS 505 to mind. The original '505 was a typical Dual design, taking its cue from the basic turntables that had been around since the 1950s by being built on a sprung-steel plate. It was a budget deck, which sold mainly to those looking to...
Hands up those who have seen a Bryan amplifier before, let alone heard one. Me neither – until I unpacked the Mark III Model 500/700 pairing seen here. The first 500 arrived when higher-power transistors were beginning to be used in quality audio, yet while the technology became universal, British brand Bryan sank without trace.
B&O Beogram 4002 Turntable
It certainly says something about the enduring appeal of a turntable when the company that made it buys up examples that are over 40 years old and sells them on to a new generation of buyers. It sounds remarkable, but this is precisely what Bang & Olufsen did recently with its 'Recreated Limited Edition' Beogram 4000c. Although offered as a...










