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#1
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I have been offered some 2nd hand hi-fi seperates from a friend who is
upgrading, due to the fact i have only ever had mid price sony midi systems, i would appreciate any advice as to wether these pieces of equipment will provide passable quality sound performance. NIKKO STEREO DC AMPLIFIER NA-990 ELTAX SYMPHONY 6 FLOORSTANDING SPEAKERS (150WATT) ROTEL RCD-855 CD PLAYER SONY PS-LX55 CD PLAYER All offered for £200($360) many thanks Andy...... |
#2
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Andy wilson wrote:
I have been offered some 2nd hand hi-fi seperates from a friend who is upgrading, due to the fact i have only ever had mid price sony midi systems, i would appreciate any advice as to wether these pieces of equipment will provide passable quality sound performance. NIKKO STEREO DC AMPLIFIER NA-990 ELTAX SYMPHONY 6 FLOORSTANDING SPEAKERS (150WATT) I'd pass on these two. ROTEL RCD-855 CD PLAYER Buy this. Maybe $100. |
#3
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I have been offered some 2nd hand hi-fi seperates from a friend who is
upgrading, due to the fact i have only ever had mid price sony midi systems, i would appreciate any advice as to wether these pieces of equipment will provide passable quality sound performance. NIKKO STEREO DC AMPLIFIER NA-990 ELTAX SYMPHONY 6 FLOORSTANDING SPEAKERS (150WATT) ROTEL RCD-855 CD PLAYER SONY PS-LX55 CD PLAYER All offered for £200($360) many thanks Andy...... Can't comment on sound quality, but the last Nikko NA-990 sold on eBay UK for 5.51 British Pounds. The last pair of Eltax Symphony 6 speakers sold for 80 British Pounds. A Rotel RCD-855 is currently selling for 15 British Pounds with 8 hours left on the auction. A Sony PS-LX55 turntable on eBay US has an opening bid of 49.99 US dollars and has no takers so far with 4 days left on a 7 day auction (it isn't worth 50 dollars). Sounds to me like your friend's prices are a tad higher than the going prices for these items. Which may or may not be worth it to you. You have the benefit of seeing and hearing these pieces before buying, unlike the case of most auctions. You probably don't have to pay for shipping either, which is a plus. For what it's worth, here's the suggested used value of some of these items according to the Orion Bluebook (in US dollars): Sony PS-LX-55 $28 Rotel RCD-855 $85 Nikko NA-890 (NA-990 not listed) $39 Orion prices are notoriously low, but you're friend's prices are relatively high. Make him an offer somewhat lower than his asking price, and see what he says... Jeff |
#4
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#6
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#7
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#8
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When I had a store front I took trades and bought equipment, using Orion
as a guide. Although the wholesale prices are low, they were valid, gioven that I had to check out the equipment, display it, demonstrate it, sell it with a limited warranty, and give refunds when the occasional item turned out to have an undisclosed intermittent problem, was not worth repairing, and had to be tossed out. (Yes, customers sometimes put one over on a store. All dishonesty does not reside in merchants.) When I paid more than the Orion book prices it usually turned out to be an error that cost me money, as shoppers have their own opinion of the value of used items, and that value is not necessarily based on the objective merits of the components. As for the fast depreciation of CD players and non-collector amps that Noussaine noted, this is proof that the Orion prices reflect the public's demand. I found that audiophiles want the latest and greatest components, and will not pay much for used equipment unless it has some mystique. But the demand varies by locality. In my Saint Louis Missouri storefront I had to sell some excellent components below what I paid until ebay gave me acces to a wider market for components that had no local fans. Conversely a few items turned out to have local fans, and I was able to make a substantial profit on these items. Individuals selling used components could possibly get Orion's retail prices if they were willing to advertise, offer demonstrations, take the risk of bad checks, and give 90 day warranties plus the privilege to return for refund. The people who sold components to me at the low wholesale Orion prices were not stupid. Generally they wanted a quick clean transaction that did not involve inviting strangers into their homes. Wylie Williams The Speaker and Stereo Store "Nousaine" wrote in message news:YXo2c.58165$ko6.406981@attbi_s02... (UnionPac2001) wrote: wrote: Orion prices are not "low" they appear to represent the trade-in price. Perhaps you are correct. This is the way Orion lists their prices: RETAIL used: $ msrp: $ WHOLESALE mint: $ average: $ I made the (perhaps erroneous) assumption that "RETAIL used: $" was the amount the item would command when sold by a DEALER to a private individual, and that "WHOLESALE mint: $, and WHOLESALE average: $" were the prices a DEALER would pay for the items to a private person selling (or trading in) the items. I guess I'm just confused... : ( I think you have it right. My comment was just that Orion prices aren't "low" they just represent what you could expect in a dealer-related transaction. What you can get from a private buyer/seller in a given deal is another issue entirely. By the way a few years ago I had my staff conduct a time/price analysis on every power amplifier and cd player listed in Orion going back as far as the listings allowed. Interestingly the trade-in prices (market value) of those electronic products fell even more quickly than the ACRS depreciation schedules from the IRS (within 3 years trade-in value of those products fell to 25% of the MSRP and by 5 years had leveled off at 5-7% of MSRP. The only exceptions were certain legacy collector products like MacIntosh power amplifiers. |
#9
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#10
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Regarding the statement "IMHO, anyone these days would have to be nuts to
trade in or sell used equipment to a dealer, when so much more profit can be had via eBay." Well, maybe some people would have to be nuts to do that, but in my store experience I have found that many people just want to get rid of old components with minimal effort. They may be nuts, but they are financially independent nuts who deem the few dollars from the sale not worth the effort. I seen and heard of many reports of home installers in a home to install a new home theater being given old stereo and home theater components by homeowners who just want the old stuff out of the house. Right now I am using a 32 inch Sony TV that was discarded by a customer because only the S-video inputs worked. Rather than repair it he bought an new 40 inch XBR and asked us to dispose of the old set. Wylie Williams The Speaker and Stereo Store |
#11
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