My first vintage audio purchase was a Marantz 2270 receiver. I purchased the unit off Craigslist from someone selling off their father’s hi-fi collection. I wasn’t the only interested buyer and what sealed the deal was that I was willing to buy it along with two other vintage receivers.
People always seem impressed that I own a Marantz 2270 and even though I enjoy owning one, there are things people should consider before spending a lot of money on one.
In this article, I will discuss the features I like about the Marantz 2270 but also point out some of the common pains that come with owning one.
A step by step guide on how to connect the preamp in a vintage integrated amplifier to an external amplifier, using photos taken from a Marantz 2270 receiver and Emotiva BASX A-100 amplifier.
Connecting an integrated receiver’s preamp to an amplifier only requires connecting a pair of RCA cables to the correct inputs (read further below for photos):
Locate the Main In and Pre Out inputs with jumpers on the rear of the vintage receiver.
Remove the jumpers from the inputs on the receiver and store them in a safe location.
Plug RCA cables into the Pre Out input on the receiver with the red cable in the Right input and the white cable into the Left input.
Next, look at the rear of the amplifier and locate the Input RCA inputs.
Connect the RCA cables from the receiver to the Input RCA inputs on the rear of the amplifier.
Power on the receiver first, then the amplifier and use the volume control on the receiver to adjust volume as needed.
All I wanted was a Marantz 2270 receiver but prices were escalating between $750-$1,000 for used units and that was just too far out of my budget.
I’d been researching vintage receivers for over a year, having decided I wanted to completely rebuild my stereo system from the ground up with all vintage gear. I have owned several stereo systems in my life but never with any vintage pieces included. All my research led me to Marantz, specifically the 2270.
A few years ago, while visiting family in Alabama during the Christmas holiday break, I went hunting for Marantz receivers on craigslist. I found someone in Manchester, TN, selling a Marantz and a couple other receivers for $600. I immediately contacted him and we went back and forth a few times before finally he told me if I wanted these I could have them but he had another buyer behind me bugging him. The next buyer didn’t want all three so in order for me to do the deal I had to purchase all three at $600. I jumped on it.
I had to meet to him very early on a Monday morning at a Cracker Barrel in Manchester, TN, which is a 45 minute drive in the opposite direction of my office. The man was very nice, explaining his elderly father was a hi-fi nut and he was cleaning out his collection.
The receivers included in the purchase are pictured above, a very clean Marantz 2270, a Sansui 2000 and a Pioneer SX-450. He told me the Pioneer was not working properly but the Sansui 2000 was still in the original box and even included the receipt from where his dad had purchased the receiver brand new in the 1970’s. The one thing I’ll never forget was picking up the Marantz receiver and placing it in my car. The receiver weighs almost 40 pounds and I had never picked up a piece of stereo equipment that heavy before.
I finally had my Marantz 2270 and it sounded great. I was so nervous hooking it up, worried it wouldn’t work properly after paying someone $600. Thankfully it did and I’ve used it as my every day receiver since. As for the $600 price tag, I sold the Sansui and Pioneer receivers for around $200 so really my Marantz 2270 only cost me $400. Of course, once I had the Marantz in place, I then had to upgrade all of my other stereo components, a story for another day, especially how I came to own my Pioneer HPM-100 speakers.
This one purchase started my love affair for vintage audio gear and I’ve been buying and reselling ever since.
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