why are old school amps worth so much?

quoted from nsxxtreme:

"Sure that's a valid point. But we had plenty of those amps in the 90's and 80's. So saying we had them now and not before really isn't valid."


During the 80's to early 90's there were more amps with real rms ratings and less with crazy peak ratings. You can look at the first sony, jvc, alpine, kenwood, lanzar, etc.. and see that their original amps have way better quality than the current models. Sure they have advanced to using class d in several of their amps but their "old school" counterparts were built better overall.

I can only remember a few cheapo amps from the early 80's, for example hitron, rockwood, kenford, pyramid. Back then pyle, sherwood, lanzar and alphasonik were not thought of as cheap generic amps, they were brand name.
When I refer to old school I'm talking 1980 to 1990. Moving into the mid to late 90's a lot of things changed.
 
ppia600:
I can only remember a few cheapo amps from the early 80's, for example hitron, rockwood, kenford, pyramid.

The word Kenford still makes me giggle. And people actually bought that stuff.

davesaudio:
I had a Craig "Powerplay" amp early 70's and a "Lear Jet" cassette.

There really were plenty of cheapo's in the 80's. Craig and Lear Jet were still around and had made little improvement since their 70's products.
There were tons of brands like MEI, Unic, Jetsound, Targa, Fultron, FAS, I'm getting queasy thinking about the old 200W underdash EQ/boosters. Most of them made amps that fell between not good, pathetic, and questionable to even label as an amplifier.

A big difference between now and then was the power booster. More entry level and budget systems used them in the old days, and they just aren't around anymore. Cheapo amps solely cater to that segment of the market now, hence there are more available.

ppia600:
And since some amps will produce 100w at .05 percent thd at any frequency from 10 to 50khz and others will only produce 100w at .05 percent at 1khz or a similar or limited range, you can actually hear a difference between a well built old school amp and a newer generic version

Absolutely agreed, but...One thing that hasn't changed over the years is the ears of the average buyer. When's the last time you heard a thumpin car ride by that actually sounded good? Even if it's got good products inside, chances are good that the driver has it cranked well into nasty THD. At that point arguing over details in power rating is moot.

Therefore, inferior products continue to sell as they morph to mimic the state of the art when most buyers don't know or care about the difference. That's captalism, and it's market driven.

We aren't the market, we're a niche. Fortunately, there are support groups like this one to help us cope with our problem! Hopefully, the niche will remain large enough for some decent products to continue to thrive.

Tim
 
tsmith1315 said:
ppia600:

........We aren't the market, we're a niche. Fortunately, there are support groups like this one to help us cope with our problem! Hopefully, the niche will remain large enough for some decent products to continue to thrive.

Tim

Well put, Tim.

My All-Alpine may or may not be old-school, but it sure sounds good. All of the components were Made-in-Japan, not Korea, Singapoer, Taiwan, and my favourite Communist China.

7618 (late 80's early 90's)
3681 (same era)
4381 (optional remote controller for the 3681)
3331 (definitely late 80's)
3522S x 4 (early 90's)
3527S (same)
6258 (pair) (~1992-3)
6257GD (pair) (~1994-5)
Pyle 8" subs OK, so it's not ALL Alpine, but close! :D (I don't remember the model#, but when they had problems, after I contacted Pyle in Indiana, they asked for them back, and promptly sent me new ones!)

Originally, I used the 3527S to drive the stereo subs, but then I stumbled across 2 more 3522S's and decided to individually drive each 8" sub by its own dedicated amplifier.

Total absolutely max. power: 320W
Total average power: a more realistic 60-70W, which proves, you don't need to take out a second mortgage, or install three more alternators for a 2MW system to have good sound.

Cheers,

Steve
 
Originally posted by tsmith1315
When's the last time you heard a thumpin car ride by that actually sounded good? Even if it's got good products inside, chances are good that the driver has it cranked well into nasty THD. At that point arguing over details in power rating is moot.

Tim

There is one guy in my neighborhood driving a well-tricked-out late-model Suburban whose system actually caught my ears (while mowing the grass, no less). Sure, he was playing some rap music - but man, it was CLEAN. The midbass hit you in the chest as he drive by and the subbass rattled the windows. Nothing on HIS car was rattling, though. I, for a moment, was jealous. :D
 
EnvisionAudio said:
nsxxtreme - are/were you affliated with Phoenix Gold (since you're so close...)? I mean...not everyone can buy an NSX. ;)
No not I'm not affiliated with Phoenix Gold. Watching Phoenix gold go from the top to a little bit better then average is truely sad. I went to the last of their friends and family sale when they were still Phoenix Gold. I picked up some really nice equipment for cheap. Even got a PG home audio amplifier 12x60w for dirt cheap.

I work for a far larger company in Oregon. I'm an asic designer in my day job. This is just a hobby and what I do for fun.
 
During the 80's to early 90's there were more amps with real rms ratings and less with crazy peak ratings. You can look at the first sony, jvc, alpine, kenwood, lanzar, etc.. and see that their original amps have way better quality than the current models. Sure they have advanced to using class d in several of their amps but their "old school" counterparts were built better overall. [/B]

I think now we are just seeing a standard used that never used to exist and is far mor generous then what was used previously.

It is truely sad seeing your favorite brands got from the top of the game to falling to budget amp status. Many have fallen. And there is no question that amps made in the past were built better then amps today (quality wise). Which is why I would buy one and use it before I bought a new amp.

For Mids and high duty I prefer class AB designs and both amps made today and in the past can handle this job. For subwoofer duty I am willing to make the trade off for efficientcy. Which I recently picked up a used PG x600.1 to power my subs for $150. I picked up a blown JL 500/1 just for the fun of repairing it. The protection circuit in it has been a pain.
 
nsxxtreme said:


I think now we are just seeing a standard used that never used to exist and is far mor generous then what was used previously.

It is truely sad seeing your favorite brands got from the top of the game to falling to budget amp status. Many have fallen. And there is no question that amps made in the past were built better then amps today (quality wise). Which is why I would buy one and use it before I bought a new amp.

For Mids and high duty I prefer class AB designs and both amps made today and in the past can handle this job. For subwoofer duty I am willing to make the trade off for efficientcy. Which I recently picked up a used PG x600.1 to power my subs for $150. I picked up a blown JL 500/1 just for the fun of repairing it. The protection circuit in it has been a pain.

You're not the first person I've heard say that. What, specifically, makes the JL difficult in this regard? I've never had the opportunity to work on one, so I'm of little help...
 
JL amps, and the 500/1 in particular, are some of the most difficult to repair for several reasons.

The stacked boards in the 500 prevent access to the components unless you make a set of jumper cables. The amp will not operate without having the preamp board connected to the main board.

Generally, when you begin working on an amp, you recognize the majority of the circuits and only have to determine how the amp is laid out to understand it fully. There is almost nothing recognizable in the JL 500. Of course, you recognize the main power supply and you can figure out where the output transistors are but beyond that, everything else is foreign. It's one of the few amps that use logic gates. This one uses them in the drive circuit for the class D audio amp. It's a very good amp but it's definitely not a clone.

In the JL 500, there are 3 power supplies. They don't power up at the same time and don't power down at the same time. There's even a difference in the operation of those supplies between the different versions.

Generally, when they fail, all you have to do is replace the power supply transistors, the gate resistors and 2 of the output transistors. When the damage involves a different part of the amp, the repairs can be much more difficult.
 
Perry Babin said:
JL amps, and the 500/1 in particular, are some of the most difficult to repair for several reasons.

The stacked boards in the 500 prevent access to the components unless you make a set of jumper cables. The amp will not operate without having the preamp board connected to the main board.

Generally, when you begin working on an amp, you recognize the majority of the circuits and only have to determine how the amp is laid out to understand it fully. There is almost nothing recognizable in the JL 500. Of course, you recognize the main power supply and you can figure out where the output transistors are but beyond that, everything else is foreign. It's one of the few amps that use logic gates. This one uses them in the drive circuit for the class D audio amp. It's a very good amp but it's definitely not a clone.

In the JL 500, there are 3 power supplies. They don't power up at the same time and don't power down at the same time. There's even a difference in the operation of those supplies between the different versions.

Generally, when they fail, all you have to do is replace the power supply transistors, the gate resistors and 2 of the output transistors. When the damage involves a different part of the amp, the repairs can be much more difficult.

That's quite a statement coming from your line of expertise. I've worked on some amplifers with logic gates in the protection circuit (Audison) and have designed a few that use the 74-series schmitt trigger in the Class D triangle generator and, likewise, 4xxx logic for synchronised supplies. One of my latest car amp designs uses a booster supply that drives the SMPS MosFet gates at 15-16V to ensure snappy turn-on even with low input voltage. Maybe this is something JL Audio is doing. Doesn't sound that scary to me... :cool: :)

I agree with nxsxtreme - I'd buy one to learn how it's done and become one the best at amplifier repair, but I'm not formally in the industry anymore. I've drifted away as new amps have come out! :confused:
 
Jonny Hotnuts said:


While I have never owned one I always thought Poweramper made a very nice looking (inside and out) amp. I dont know if they were worth a poop but the build is nice.


Must be a good amp considering what it sold for. Maybe you run them in pairs?

I have a newish sony mobile ES made in japan amp, it seems to be built nicely too. They even labeled stuff on the board like what section of amp a spot is, all the voltages at jumpers, etc., and it is switchable to high current like an old SS amp. Can even disable the feedback, what ever that does it has many interesting features. I know little about them though excepting the fact that sony charges x10 for parts if you can't find them elsewhere. It says explod on it too, never seen an explod made in japan. It is huge for its wattage. I know the old sony japan amps are pretty good, but I still dislike the company for other reasons no matter what products they make.
 
jol50 said:



Must be a good amp considering what it sold for. Maybe you run them in pairs?

I have a newish sony mobile ES made in japan amp, it seems to be built nicely too. They even labeled stuff on the board like what section of amp a spot is, all the voltages at jumpers, etc., and it is switchable to high current like an old SS amp. Can even disable the feedback, what ever that does it has many interesting features. I know little about them though excepting the fact that sony charges x10 for parts if you can't find them elsewhere. It says explod on it too, never seen an explod made in japan. It is huge for its wattage. I know the old sony japan amps are pretty good, but I still dislike the company for other reasons no matter what products they make.


Those mobile es amps were very nice amps. they are a night and day difference from the made in china explode amps out there. is yours the huge red one with the silver es badge on the top? any pics?
 
No pics yet, it is huge red with big thick fins only at rear. Has square gold explod/mobile ES badge on center top. Has curved alum cover/shroud at front to sort of cover wires and has LED in that for various things. Is rated 2x75 rms at 4 and can go to I think 360x1rms at 1 ohm. Controls on front under shroud. Side plates have little square vent holes in them. Yes, not like china explodes I have seen. It is big, I have a 1kw old class d that is about same size.

Oh wait, found a cheater pic xm7527:
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
 
jol50 said:
No pics yet, it is huge red with big thick fins only at rear. Has square gold explod/mobile ES badge on center top. Has curved alum cover/shroud at front to sort of cover wires and has LED in that for various things. Is rated 2x75 rms at 4 and can go to I think 360x1rms at 1 ohm. Controls on front under shroud. Side plates have little square vent holes in them. Yes, not like china explodes I have seen. It is big, I have a 1kw old class d that is about same size.

Oh wait, found a cheater pic xm7527:
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.


yah those are the ones. i remeber those coming out around 2000 or 2001. the last of the good sony mobile es line. $400 msrp!
 
At one point I had a Sony MobileES 75Wx2 (long time before Xplod... ; ) that was quite a robust little amp. It claimed 1ohm stability, but I got it to protect itself by paralleling a pair of 4ohm Orion XTR 10s. Lots of power at 2 and 4 ohms, though, and a nice gold coloured heatsink, with topmount controls! I like top controls...
 
It is supposed to be broke but it works so not sure what to do, guess I better run it under 2 ohms and see what it does maybe that is it. Very nice clean layout inside and all labeled. The SMD is all on the back side of board...boards as it has one PS, one output, and part of filters is on third. Offset is under 15mv IIRC. I've seen the old gold ES, yeah even jensen can do top controls but not that many do.