Technics CDP

cjackson

New member
Sep 27, 2009
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I bought a Technics CD Player - It cost me £10.

It's model number is SL-PG570A, looked on Google but cannot find much information about it. I have hooked it up and it sounds SUPERB!! Reading disc's It's very quick.

Has anybody had or have got one of these ? Is it worth keeping it for my main system ?

Thanks
 
Hi cjackson

I have sold quite a few of these and as you discovered the SLPG570 is a cracking cd player. Imo Technics cd players were reliable and superb machines that punched above their weight.
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Btw, if you are happy with the SLPG570 than keep it in your main system.

All the best

Rick @ Musicraft
 
After getting used to Bluray players and CD players that play SACD and DVD-A discs, older players will seem quite quick nowadays! Technics CD players were always very reliable, and most used servo assisted laser mechs, which could read scratched discs better then most other machines. Chances are, when it fails, it'll be unrepairable and assigned to the scrapheap, but in the meantime, enjoy your £10 player! Even if it lasts for a year, you'll get a tenners worth!
 
I used to have the 580A CDP about 12 years back; great little player. Fine transport too, sadly no means to attach an offboard DAC, which was a missed opportunity I think as it had a great build for a £120 machine. By coincidence, I sold it for £5 on Ebay recently. Reckon the 570A would've been of a similar breed; well rated player too from memory.
 
The SLP-S670A is one of the best CD players I've ever had and I'd have another in a flash.
Technics really knew how to make a great budget CD player with the emphasis on musical enjoyment.
 
I must be lucky, my CD player doesn't punch anything either above or below its weight
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If you have a look at the TNT site you'll see that a certain French manufacturer basically used the innards of Technics players for its early models.
 
Richersouds was knocking them off at £30 a box, brand new around late 80's. If I remember rightly, it was very smooth sounding player which at the time, most budget digital playback was harsh and bright so the Technics was an instant hit.
 
MUSICRAFT:
Hi the record spot

Good post.

All the best

Rick @ Musicraft

Hey Rick - always wondered why people cribbed that the Technics CDPs of the late 90s were 'safe' sounding. To my mind, that means "you can listen to the thing for hours", which is the point of them for me!