I will add one more possible excellent source if you're in no rush, though
to some this might be a bit morbid. But hey, it's Halloween.

As people downsize or die, the contents of their homes are often put up for
auction and very good older equipment can be had for extremely good prices.
This commonly includes older stereo equipment including the very receiver
William needs. I've seen old models of high-end brands such as Marantz and
Denon go for next to nothing because they're all-analogue. (Sometimes
retailers will use this tactic to get rid of thought-unsellable inventory
so there are some "reseller managed" auctions in the mix.)

(BTW, I recall Sanyo as a mid-tier brand in the 70s -- I'd say the current
equivalent in computers would be Acer.)

The best estate-auction site of which I'm aware is Maxsold, which both
manages auctions and promotes seller-managed ones. You tell it where you
live, what you want and what distance you're prepared to go to pick it up,
and it finds all relevant auctions. Here is the first thing I found when
looking <https://maxsold.com/auction/77867/bidgallery/item/5680834>:
receiver, equalizer and multi-disc CD player sold as one lot (you have to
buy them together). Current bid is $1 and closes in six days; if you have
the winning bid you have to pick it up at a specific place and date. Much
of the stuff sold like this is as-is, but usually the owner will report if
it's in working condition. Auctions usually last for a week or two but
there are new ones all the time.

Most people who want to sell stuff like this while they're alive will use
sites like Kijiji, Facebook marketplace or even eBay. But Maxsold also
makes sense if you have a lot of stuff to get rid of after spring cleaning,
it will bring more money than a yard sale.

Your ceiling should be no higher than $275 because you can get something
new for that price
<https://www.amazon.ca/Sony-STRDH190-Receiver-Bluetooth-Component/dp/B078WFDR8D/ref=sr_1_5>.
But using one of the sites above you should be able to get something for a
fraction of that.

TMI time: In another message Hugh wrote:

New receivers often don't support RIAA equalization needed for record
> players.  You can get an external phonograph pre-amp to do that or you can
> get an old receiver with a phono input. (Since phonographs are cool again
> MAYBE phono in has been revived on some   models.)


In my experience (and my first job was at a stereo store, TAT near
Yonge-Steeles), a pre-amp might be necessary, but it has nothing to do with
equalization. Rather, there used to be two stylus-cartridge types used for
turntables -- ceramic and magnetic. Ceramic cartridges were cheaper and had
lower-quality sound, but produced high sound levels similar to other
sources like cassette or CD players. Magnetic cartridges were more
expensive and accurate, but far quieter and needed a pre-amp. Most
receivers made from the 70s to the 2000s. and many but not all made today,
have a separate "phono" input that indicates a pre-amp is built in. Given
that these days vinyl records are bought for perceived better fidelity,
ceramic-based cartridges aren't even made anymore; the difference now is
moving-magnet or moving-coil. And I just shocked myself seeing what can be
spent on just a cartridge these days, in support of a medium I thought was
obsolete.

(Whether the "record player" William has is ceramic or magnetic depends on
the stylus cartridge installed, not the turntable itself. Most likely
magnetic.)

HTH,
Evan




On Sun, Oct 29, 2023 at 10:17 PM William Park via talk <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Hi, a very off topic...
>
> While cleaning my house, I found box speakers and LP record player.
> Brand name "Sanyo".  What's missing is AM/FM receiver that came as a
> set.  Do you know where I can buy an old stereo AM/FM receiver?
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-- 
Evan Leibovitch, Toronto Canada
@evanleibovitch / @el56
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