Originally posted by mangerton
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Can anyone help me choose a mini hifi?
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI bought this to prove that I had won the £1,000,000 bet I made in 1961 - that Mozart's 40th would reach the Top 10. Sadly, my adversary defaulted on his obligation.
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Thropplenoggin
Originally posted by MickyD View PostThanks for the tip, Flosshilde....yes, I do occasionally come over and will give the Richer Sounds website a look, it might well give me the help I am looking for.
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Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostI, too, am in France. All electronic goods seem to be more expensive this side of La Manche. I did like-for-like comparisons with speakers and separates earlier this year, and sometimes there's as much as £50-70 difference between the cheaper Blighty and here.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostI assume that the delivery charges given by Richer Sounds apply to the UK only - it might be worth finding out how much they would charge for delivery to France. If it's less than the price difference between the UK & France it might be worth trying.
in exchange for a few cases of Languedoc and a box of those little squid pies from Sete
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keithbraidwood2
I have a Denon DM38 (it has been recently updated to the DM39). There's a rough rule of thirds when buying hi-fi separates. If, for example, your budget was £1000 you take off 10-15% for interconnects and speaker cable and split the remainder into thirds if you are looking for an amplifier, CD player and speakers.
For mini systems, I'd take off 10% for decent speaker cables and split the remainder for the unit and speakers. The DM38 I have was only £250 for the unit and matching Denon speakers but the main unit is so good it's been said you can use it with speakers up to £500/pair. I assume something similar with the updated version.
There are also units by Cambridge Audio (via Richer Sounds), Marantz, Teac, Onkyo. Richer Sounds are good but you can get items cheaper elsewhere (which Richer will, of course, match) but depends on delivery distance and timescale you require.
The Denon I have replaced a separates based system costing £1000-1500 and to me sounds just as good, if not a little better.
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Richer have the Denon DM39 for £250 excluding speakers, so you must have got quite a bargain! They don't seem to have any recommended speakers to go with it.
Ah yes, I've just found them. There are several options, starting with a package/bundle that only costs £30 more than the unit alone, up to £80 more.
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keithbraidwood2
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostRicher have the Denon DM39 for £250 excluding speakers, so you must have got quite a bargain! They don't seem to have any recommended speakers to go with it.
Ah yes, I've just found them. There are several options, starting with a package/bundle that only costs £30 more than the unit alone, up to £80 more.
From RS, the Cambridge Audio S30 speakers are very good. But, when you choose speaker cable you can get much better elsewhere (HiFi Cables for example).
Put simply, choosing a better quality mini system means you may have to look at several outlets for the unit, speakers and speaker cables. Not always the case admittedly but it depends on where you have it. The Denon is my main system as, living in a relatively small flat, I could no longer justify the rack and separate components of a 'true' hifi system. Besides, my book and CD collections are getting bigger! I do miss the separates but it was the logical thing to do. That said, when I move house...
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Resurrection Man
Sorry but I don't buy into these oxygen-free/self-polarising/non-distorting/look pretty cables. You can't beat a decent bit of mains cable!
To prove the point, I stripped a length of twin and earth mains power cable down to the red and black and wandered off to one of those places in Tottenham Court Road where they had a set-up with knife switches and top of the range kit so they could compare different speaker cables. I asked the salesman if we could try mine against his state-of-the-art ones (mega expensive) as 'I thought I might be able to improve on mine'. So we spent an hour comparing them and in the end he reckoned that they were just as good as his very expensive jobbies...but perhaps the expensive jobbies had 'just a little bit more clarity in the top end?'. Then he asked me where I'd bought mine from. I won't repeat his words here.
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keithbraidwood2
Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostSorry but I don't buy into these oxygen-free/self-polarising/non-distorting/look pretty cables. You can't beat a decent bit of mains cable!
To prove the point, I stripped a length of twin and earth mains power cable down to the red and black and wandered off to one of those places in Tottenham Court Road where they had a set-up with knife switches and top of the range kit so they could compare different speaker cables. I asked the salesman if we could try mine against his state-of-the-art ones (mega expensive) as 'I thought I might be able to improve on mine'. So we spent an hour comparing them and in the end he reckoned that they were just as good as his very expensive jobbies...but perhaps the expensive jobbies had 'just a little bit more clarity in the top end?'. Then he asked me where I'd bought mine from. I won't repeat his words here.
Cables DO make a difference but only if the listener and equipment merits it. Happily many companies offer a service for customers to test cables for a period at a minimal cost. Less important for mini systems, perhaps, but good to know.
By the way, what did your 'place' define as top of the range kit?
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