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What is stereo?




There are now two system of high fidelity, monophonic (monaural) and stereophonic. Monophonic is a system that starts from one microphone and is fed through a single high fidelity set. Stereophonic is a double system. Two separate microphones are placed at different sides of the orchestra and two different systems are used to keep the two signals or channels separated. Two separate speakers are used, placed on different sides of you room. Stereo is much like 3-D photography, two slightly different sound reach your ears giving you a new dimension in sound.




H.H. Scott '59





Visualizzazione post con etichetta series 20. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta series 20. Mostra tutti i post

Pioneer F-26

The F-26 tuner, like the other components in the Series 20 line, received carefully design engineering to push the technological envelope on tuner design. In true audiophile fashion, it featured FM only. It was a higher performance, lower profile design compared to the F28 tuner. Pioneer employed newfeatures and circuitry having: Quartz-Locked Touch Sensor Tuning, an elaborate "Clean Pilot" system for cleaner high-frequency, and a Parallel Balanced Linear Detector( PBLD) for vastly improved signal-to-noise ratio and detection efficiency. This tuner also featured automatic wide/narrow IF bandwidth slection. The F-26 was design with a large power supply and two 6000 microfarad power supply capacitors, a muting level control on the rear panel, adjustable stereo/mono signal switchover, adjustable muting control, and gold plated terminals.

Specifications

Circuit system:

Quartz sampling locked, IF band auto switching, P.B.L. A detector, the pilot signal auto cancellar built-in PLL MPX

S/N (sensitivity 50 dB):

mono: 3.5 microvolts (new IHF and 16.1 dBf),

stereo: 40 microvolts (new IHF and 37.2 dBf)

Practical speed: mono: 1.8 microvolts, new IHF 10.3 dBf

S/N ratio:

mono: 86 dB,

stereo: 83 dB

THD:

Wide: 0.05% (20 Hz)

Mono:

0.03% (1 kHz),

0.03% (10 kHz),

0.04% (15 kHz)

Stereo:

0.06% (20 Hz),

0.05% (1 kHz),

0.1% (10 kHz),

0.25% (15 kHz)

THD Narrow:

mono: 0.15% (1 kHz),

stereo: 0.3% (1 kHz)

Capture ratio Narrow: 2.0 dB

Effective selectivity Narrow: 75 dB (300 kHz)

Stereo separation:

Wide:

55 dB (1 kHz),

50 dB (50 Hz - 10 kHz),

40 dB (20 Hz - 15 kHz)

Narrow: 50 dB (1 kHz)

Image stonewalling ratio: 120 dB

IF stonewalling ratio: 120 dB

Spurious stonewalling ratio: 120 dB

AM supression ratio: 65 dB

Subcarrier ratio: 75 dB

Muting operation level: 5.5 microvolts (20 dBf) - a 55-microvolt (40 dBf) variable

Auto mono-switching level: 17 microvolts (30 dBf) - a 170-microvolt (50 dBf) variable

Antenna: 300 Ω balance type, 75 Ω unbalance type

Level/Output load impedance (100% modulation):

Fixed: 650 mV / 2.2 kohm

Variable: 50 mV - 1.3V/3 kohm (Max)

I multipath output:

Vertical: 100 mV / 5 kohm (AM, 1 kHz, 30% modulation)

Horizontal: 500 mV / 4.1 kohm (FM, 1 kHz, 100% modulation)

The semiconductor used:

FET: 10 pieces,

Transistor: 66 pieces,

IC: 16 pieces,

Diode, others : 54 pieces

Power supply 100 - 240 V, 50/60 Hz

Power consumption: 14 W

Dimensions (W x H x D): 420 x 81 x 355 mm

Weight: 7,5 kg

Pioneer M-25

Pioneer M 25 is amplifier in Class AB technology, plays in Class A up to 30 +30 watts and automatically adapts to AB-Circuitery at higher levels. Maximum output power is 120 +120 Watts RMS at 8 Ohms. Minimal distortion is guaranteed. Excellent dynamic, fresh and clear sound with high resolution soundfield.

Carefully Selected High-quality Parts

Each and every part which makes up the M-25 has been singled out for its quality so that only the best is finally chosen. Among the parts employed are gold-plated input and speaker terminals, printed circuit boards of paper epoxy resin with a high insulation resistance, and printed circuit boards using 70u thick copper foil, low-resistance pure copper plates for parallel connections and for the grounding wire, and non-inductive cement resistors.

Esthetically Satisfying and Full-bodied Design

The visual appeal of the power transistors and heat sinks mounted on a broad-based silver-toned aluminium die-cast chassis is what you would expect from a top-quality power amplifier. Just one look at the M-25 is enough to convince you of its tremendous power and stability.

The first stage of the M-25 adopts a dual transistor differential amplifier with a current mirror as the load for a superb stability and gain right from the lowest low frequencies to the highest high frequencies. The pre-driver stage consists of a voltage amplifier with a constant current circuit as the load, and this makes for a significant improvement in the degree of use of the power voltage, and also for a satisfying gain and linearity. The power stage features a Class AB pure complementary parallel push-pull circuit with a three-stage Darlington connection. A newly developed power transistor called a Ring Emitter Transistor (RET) has been introduced into the new Class AB circuitry. This feature guarantees an ultra wide frequency range which turns the attributes of the RET to maximum advantage, and also a superior low-distortion response whatever the power rating - across an ultra-low to full power spectrum. The M-25 delivers continuous power output of 120 watts per channel, min at 8 ohms from 5 Hertz to 30,000 Hertz with no more than 0.01% total harmonic distortion.

In particular, the Class AB SEPP circuit functions as a Class-A circuit which is highly rated on account of its hi-fidelity sound reproduction capabilities with low power outputs (up to 3W/8-ohms). This means that you can enjoy the final sound as you would from a Class-A amplifier. Finally, the pre-driver section contains an over-drive limiter and a power limiter for protecting the power transistors. This helps to greatly improve the reliability.

Twin Transformer Power Supply for Excellent Separation

The Pioneer M-25 is symmetrically designed with completely separate heavyweight class power supplies for each channel. Each employs large-capacity capacitors (two 22,000uF for each channel) which not only feature excellent regulation but also have plenty of reserve. Along with the wide-band frequency response, they ensure a superior channel separation and a reproduction of sound which is both clear and full of latent energy. There is also a surge-killer circuit to keep the inrush current from the power transformers as well as the high current which charges the electrolytic capacitors to the bare minimum, and this feature reduces the load on all of the related parts.

Highly Dependable Protective Circuitry

The M-25 employs a relay type of protective circuit which is equipped with a current detector and an over-current detector. This circuit is designed to protect the speakers from unforeseen accidents caused by the generation of current in the output, or from short-circuiting of the speaker terminals owing to faulty contacts, as well as the power transistors by releasing the output circuitry momentarily. Moreover, the output circuit relay is for 4-circuit high current uses and all the circuits are connected in parallel for enhanced reliability. This circuitry can also be counted on to perform muting when the power switch is flipped between On and Off.

Specifications

Circuit system:

3 steps of first rank differential current mirror load-intensities Darlington
Parallel push pull pure complimentary OCL circuitry (AB class operation, DC amplifier stream composition)

Effective output (both channel drive):

8 ohm: 120 W+120 W (5 Hz – 30 kHz, THD 0.01%), 120 W+120 W (5 Hz – 80 kHz, THD 0.05%)

4 ohm: 120 W+120 W (5 Hz – 20 kHz, THD 0.02%)

THD (5 Hz – 30 kHz, 8 ohm):

At the time of an effective output: 0.01%
At the time of 60 W output: 0.01%
At the time of 1 W output: 0.007%

Cross modulation distortion (50 Hz : 7 kHz = 4:1 or 8 ohm):

At the time of an effective output: 0.006%
At the time of 60 W output: 0.005%
At the time of 1W output: 0.005%

Output bandwidth (IHF, both channel drive):

5 Hz – 45 kHz (0.01% of distortion)
5 Hz – 100 kHz (0.05% of distortion)

Frequency response: 5 Hz-200 kHz +0-1 dB (at the time of 1 W output)

Input terminal: Input: 1V/50kohm

Output-terminal: Speaker: 4 ohm – 16 ohm

Dumping factor: 100 (20H z – 20 kHz, 8 ohm)

SN ratio (IHF, A network) Short circuit: 120 dB

Channel separation: 1 kHz:105 dB; 100 kHz:70 dB

The semiconductor used: Transistor: 55 pieces, Diode, other:53 piece

Supply voltage: 100V - 240V, 50Hz/60Hz

Power consumption: 280W (Electrical Appliance and Material Control Law)

Maximum electric power consumption: 800W

Dimensions (W x H x D): 420 x 153 x 370 mm; 16-9/16 x 6-1/32 x 14-9/16 inch

Weight: 23,5 kg; 51 lb 11 oz (without package)

Pioneer M-22

The die-cast aluminum radiator, die-cast chassis employing class A stereo power amplifiers.

The streamer A class action is adopted. A class operation and is shed every idle current when no signal is still a lot of transistors, the method uses only transistors operating range with good linearity. A work-class power utilization is low, but increasing the amount of heat, the two push-pull output transistors are synthesized and amplified to obtain the same waveform and bottom, B strain and the switching amplifier is not salmon crossover distortion does not occur.

M-22 to A-level circuit is run, NFB removed the DC circuit capacitor amplifier configuration, the DC by the time constant of the formation of the loop without NFB, a flat phase characteristics were obtained through ultra-low, stable NFB operation are obtained. This A-class operation and streamer configurations DC amplifier,i realized the middle and high range and excellent bass response without distortion sense.

The M-22 was a pure Class A amplifier that was rated at 30 watts per channel. Pioneer stated in its Series 20 brochure: "Class-A circuits are used throughout to reduce distortion. If operated in Class-B the M-22 would deliver no less than 150 watts per channel--five times as much--with so-so distortion. The most sophisticated circuit construction yet developed by Series Twenty is reflected here, along with truly first-class parts and components to asssure you're getting the real advantages of such design."

Like the C-21 Preamplifier, the M-22 used metallized polyester capacitors and nichrome-vaporized, metal-coated resistors. Pioneer utilized a dual mono circuit design and component layout, with a massive power transformer for each channel, coupled with two equally large 22,000 microfarad electrolytic capacitors per channel. The left and right channel circuitry was mounted to large die-cast finned aluminum heatsinks. All this was mounted to a rigid die-cast aluminum chassis.

What was striking about both the M-22 and M-25 amplifiers was, of course, their appearance. Practically all amplifiers in the late 1970s and early 1980s were fully enclosed by sheetmetal on all sides, with a ventiated cover. Pioneer took the minimalist approach, indeed, a purely industrial design approach to the design of these amplifiers. All the key components were visible, with the left and right channel components grouped in a mirror image. This really appealed to audiophiles who truly are intrigued by the "innards" of their electronic components.

Specyfications

Integrated systems: Two-stage differential, PPdrive, two-stage Darlington, parallel PP. Net complementary OCL (A-class operation, DC amplifier configurtion)

Effective output (both ch driven): 30 W + 30 W (10 Hz - 30 kHz, 8Ω)

Harmonic distortion (10 Hz - 30 kHz, 8Ω):

RMS output: 0,01%,

15 W output: 0,005%,

1 W output: 0,005%

Intermodulation distortion (50 Hz: 7 kHz=4:1,8 Ω):

RMS output: 0,005%,

15 W output: 0,003%,

1 W output: 0,003%

Output bandwidth (IHF, both ch driven): 5 Hz - 100 kHz (strain rate of 0,01%)

Frequency: 2 Hz - 150 kHz +0 -1 dB(1W output)

Input: 1V / 50kohms

Output speakers: 8 ohms

Damping Factor: 60 (20 Hz - 20 kHz, 8 ohms)

SN ratio (IHF, A network) Short circuit: 106 dB

Semiconductor: Transistor: 44 pieces, Diode, other: 62 piece

Power supply: 100V - 220V, 50Hz/60Hz

Power consumption: 10W

Dimensions (W x H x D): 420 x 158 x 370mm

Weight: 22 kg

Pioneer C-21

Pioneer designed the C-21 Preamplifier to work in conjunction with the M-22 or the M-25 amplifier in the Series 20 line. The control layout was simple and uncluttered. Front left to right, they were Power, Gain (left and right), Tape monitor, Volume, Cartridge Load (adjustable for resistance and capacitance), and selector knob for Phono, Subsonic Phono, Aux1 and Aux 2.

Pioneer stated the C-21 was mainly assembled by hand using the finest grade circuit parts. These included Nichrome-vaporized, metal-coated resistors, metallized polypropylene capacitors, metallized polyester film capacitors, super-low noise electrolytic capacitors, and a large power supply transformer having an oriented core with separate secondary windings for the left and right channels with additional shielding to further reduce crosstalk. Even the contact points inside each gain pot were silver palladium treated and resistors were palladium and silver alloy. The total number of semiconductors included 36 transistors and 47 diodes. The quality of the electronic parts that went into the C-21 made for a wonderfully transparent and accurate preamplifier.

Circuit system:

Equalizer-amplifier Circuit System: 2 steps of differentials current mirror amplification Class-A SEPP

Control-amplifier Circuit System: 2 steps of differentials current mirror amplification Class-A SEPP

Input terminal:

Phono: 2.5mV/100 ohm, 10kohm, 25kohm, 50kohm, 75kohm, 100kohm

Cartridge load capacity: 100pF, 150pF, 200pF, 300pF, 400pF, 500pF

AUX1, 2, Tape Play:150mV /, 50kohm

Phono maximum permissible input: 300mV (1kHz, THD 0.01%)

Output-terminal:

Tape Rec: 150mV / 1kohm

Output (RL: 50kohm): 1V/450 ohm (rate), 20V/150 ohm (MAX)

THD (20 Hz - 20 kHz):

Phono: 0.006% (at the time of 1V output Volume -20 dB, gain-control 0 dB)

AUX: 0.005% (at the time of 1V output gain-control 0 dB)

Frequency :

Phono: 20 Hz-20 kHz ±0.2 dB

AUX: 10 Hz-100 kHz +0 -0.2 dB, 3 Hz - 300 kHz +0 -1.0 dB

SN ratio (IHF, A network) Short circuit:

Phono: 80 dB (output 1 V:00)

AUX: 100 dB (output 1 V:00)

Phono Subsonic Filter: 15 Hz, 6 dB / oct

Semiconductor: Transistor: 36 pieces, Diode, other: 47 piece

Power supply: 100V - 220V, 50Hz/60Hz

Power consumption: 10W

Dimensions (W x H x D): 420 x 81 x 357mm

Weight: 6,3 kg

Pioneer Series 20

Pioneer introduced a line of true audiophile components in the late 1970s known as Series 20. These components used the latest engineering and displayed the finest quality parts Pioneer had ever manufactured. The components included the C-21 Preamplifier, the M-22 and M-25 Amplifier, the D-23 Crossover, the F-26 and F-28 tuner, the A-27 Integrated Amplifier, the PLC-590 Turntable and PA-1000 Tonearm. There was also a U-24 Program Selector used primarily by Pioneer dealers. All but the turntable and tonearm are covered in this section.

Pioneer C-21
Pioneer designed the C-21 Preamplifier to work in conjunction with the M-22 or the M-25 amplifier in the Series 20 line. The control layout was simple and uncluttered. Front left to right, they were Power, Gain (left and right), Tape monitor, Volume, Cartridge Load (adjustable for resistance and capacitance), and selector knob for Phono, Subsonic Phono, Aux1 and Aux 2.
Specifications were impressive, to say the least. Frequency response in the Phono section was 20 to 20,000 Hz +/- 0.2dB; it was 10 to 100,000 Hz +0 dB, -0.2 dB on Aux1 and 3 to 300,000 Hz +0 dB, -1.0dB on Aux2 ! Total harmonic distortion was a mere 0.01%. This was most definitely in the audiophile arena of performance.

Pioneer M-22
The M-22 was a pure Class A amplifier that was rated at 30 watts per channel. Pioneer stated in its Series 20 brochure: "Class-A circuits are used throughout to reduce distortion. If operated in Class-B the M-22 would deliver no less than 150 watts per channel--five times as much--with so-so distortion. The most sophisticated circuit construction yet developed by Series Twenty is reflected here, along with truly first-class parts and components to asssure you're getting the real advantages of such design."
And this is what Pioneer had to say specifically about the M-22's performance: "Not to be overlooked is the extremely wide power bandwidth offered in the M-22: 5Hz to 100kHz, both channels driven, 0.01% THD. Note also that the frequency response is an amazing 2Hz to 150kHz, + 0dB/1 dB at 1 watt, and that the signal-to-noise ratio is a high 106 dB (IHF short-circuited A network." At its full power output of 30 watts into 8 ohms, this amp had no more than 0.01% THD between 10 Hz and 30kHz! Class A indeed!

Pioneer D-23



The D-23 was a multi-amp electronic crossover network to permit bi-amping or tri-amping. The crossover frequencies were divided into low, mid-low, mid-high and high. The range of the crossover frequencies could be varied within these four groups with the upper row of control knobs. The four larger knobs in the center were the level controls. The six smaller knobs at the bottom of the panel were to adjust the slope.
The D-23 had impressive specifications, like all the Series 20 components. Its total harmonic distortion was a mere 0.005% between 20 Hz and 20 kHz. The signal to noise ratio was 100 dB IHF, A-rated.
more...
Pioneer U-24 Program Selector




When Pioneer designed the Series 20 line, the C-21 pre-amp had one input for phone and tape, plus two auxiliary inputs. Pioneer saw the need for a program source selector for those audiophiles--or Pioneer dealers--that required more inputs for multiple sources. The U-24 Program Selector was the result.
The U-24 had two AUX inputs, three phono inputs, four tape inputs and outputs different tape decks (cassette or reel to reel) with tape to tape dubbing facilities, and three power amplifier outputs. It measured 16.53 inches wide, 3.18 inches high and 12.97 inches deep.
more...



Pioneer M-25
The M-25 was rated at 120 watts continuous, per channel with both channels driven into 8 ohms from 5 Hz to 30,000 Hz, with no more than 0.01% total harmonic distortion. In fact, this amp could reproduce ultrasonic frequencies up to 80 kHz with only 0.05% THD! Why have such capability beyond the range of human hearing? Pioneer stated: "It is essential to the high quality of signals within the hearable range that those beyond that range are handled cleanly in order to avoid harmonic distortion and other harful irregularities. And this the M-25 does with impressive accuracy, at full power."Pioneer M-25
To do this, Pioneer employed newly-developed Ring Emitter Transistors (RETs) instead of Field Effect Transistors (FETs). The RETs had better high frequency characteristics. It employed all the high-grade semiconductors as those used in the M-22, and the same 22,000 microfarad power capacitors. It naturally had higher output power supplies.

Pioneer F-26



The F-26 tuner, like the other components in the Series 20 line, received carefully design engineering to push the technological envelope on tuner design. In true audiophile fashion, it featured FM only. It was a higher performance, lower profile design compared to the F28 tuner. Pioneer employed newfeatures and circuitry having: Quartz-Locked Touch Sensor Tuning, an elaborate "Clean Pilot" system for cleaner high-frequency, and a Parallel Balanced Linear Detector( PBLD) for vastly improved signal-to-noise ratio and detection efficiency.
This tuner also featured automatic wide/narrow IF bandwidth slection. The F-26 was design with a large power supply and two 6000 microfarad power supply capacitors, a muting level control on the rear panel, adjustable stereo/mono signal switchover, adjustable muting control, and gold plated terminals.

Pioneer A-27



The A-27 Integrated Amplifier was the most expensive component in the Series 20 line. Pioneer clearly intended to incorporate much of the circuit design from the M-type amplifiers, but have a greater degree of control than the C-21 pre-amp. It used the "Magni-Wide" DC power amplifier section, but also used a total of three other all-DC-configured amplifier stages: a DC phono equalizer amp, a DC flat amp and DC "head amp" for Moving Coil (MC) type phono cartridges. Like the M-25, the A-27 used RETs in the output stage. It also used automatic Class AB switching, operating in Class A mode until the sudden audio peaks automatically switched to Class B.
The A-27 used two large power supply transformers, one for each channel, positioned on the left of the chassis, and four electrolytic capacitors. The circuitry employed 206 semi-conductors: four FETs, 122 transistors and 80 diodes.
The A-27 was rated at 120 watts per channel into 8 ohms, from 5 hz to 30 kHz with no more than 0.012% total harmonic distortion. Between 20 Hz and 20 kHz, toal harmonic distortion was a mere 0.008%--virtually non-existant distortion! Intermodulation distortion was only 0.006%. The A-27 entire frequency response ranged from 5 Hz to 200 kHz.


Pioneer F-28




The other tuner in the Series 20 line was the F-28. It differed in appearance and price (lower) from the F-26, but was still a superb performer. It employed Pioneer's Photo Logic Synthesizer/Quartz Locked system and "Clean Pilot" circuitry. It also used the Parallel Balanced Linear Detector and featured selectable Wide/Narrow IF Bandwidth. The circuitry used a 5-gang variable capacitor for higher tuning accuracy to improve image response, spurious response and IF response ratios, all having 120 dB or better.Its signal to noise ratio in mono was 84 dB and in stereo 81 dB.The F-28 employed 10 FETs, 21 ICs, 63 transistors and 56 Diodes. It measured 16.56 inches wide, 6.12 inches high and 14.21 inches deep. It weighed 19 pounds, 13 ounces and had an M.S. R. P. of $690.00.