Wait time = 48 months!
No price quote.
Nice!! Is it yours? Is it restored?
just got two mint Sony TA NR-1 amplifiers this weekend.
No, it's just a YouTube video I found after you mentioned your wish of the 1080.
I liked the tune and it showed the 1080 front face reasonably well.
I posted couple links yesterday about restoration of the vintage 1050 and approximate cost. It can be roughly between $300 and $400 depending.
I like vintage audio equipment, it reminds me of first love experiences when I was in my teens. ...Girlfriends; number one first love...Roxanne. Her dad was a high profile doctor surgeon, he died in a car accident when I was 15-16, and while courtising his daughter. I could write a book, or two, but not here, not now.
Wait time = 48 months!
No price quote.
...
I wish I had those sorts of book worthy romantic memories! Instead I remember the poverty I experienced after splurging on that Pioneer, my first good piece of audio gear. I couldn’t afford speakers for it at first. Was rescued by some workmates who had obtained blueprints of the Bose 901s that were revolutionary at the time (yeah, I know, don’t gag). One of the engineers at HP where I worked had taken apart Bose speakers and equalizers, drawn up blueprints, sourced parts from same vendors as Bose, etc. Those blueprints got passed around the workplace a bit and luckily came to one of my workmates. So my brother and I and a big bunch of workmates (I was the only female) got together and over a couple of weekends made speakers and equalizers. I had a wonderful time. Those unlovely, particle board beasts were “it” in my living room until I bought my Quads in the 80s. Sadly, the Pioneer never had proper speakers to show off with because I set it aside at that point. It hasn’t been much used since.
As Homer Simpson once said,Doh!
Awesome read, you made me smiling too, right from your opening.
As someone who has done a few restorations, the only advice i can give is: don't do it.
Money-wise it is a bottomless pit and the end result will always be limited by the zillion crappy switches along the signal path. And how about the termination? Are willing to retain the spring loaded speaker terminals? And the horrendously cheap phono jacks?
Perhaps a very limited scope restoration may be worth it. Perhaps not. Main PS caps, all coupling caps, output relays. Seems easy and cheap. But there is always the chance that the relays form factor is no longer available, or that really good sounding filter caps cannot be fitted without some surgery.
I don't agree with this at all.... Particularly when speaking about a SX series Pioneer. I have been restoring vintage audio for over 20 years.
The switches are excellent quality in these, and rob little if anything if cleaned properly. You can bypass the tone controls, which is the most damaging to the signal integrity IMO.
I have never had a problem sourcing electronic parts that fit and work better than the original most times.
With some upgrades, the SX-1050 will satisfy most anybody that is looking for a vintage 2 channel system. Totally worth restoring properly, and will AT LEAST compete dollar for dollar, even if you put $800 into the restoration.