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Kenwood KT-917
Kenwood KT-917
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Rating
Reviewed by:
Bud Master
(AudioPhile)

Review Date
March 21, 2003

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 1.00 votes

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Review 1 of 2

Price Paid:  $550.00 from mid state elect.

Summary:
I have had the KT-917 tuner and also the KA-907 Amp since 1978 and they have been the only one i have owned. The set has been flawless in preformance and sound quality!!! i have used them almost every day for 25 years and except for the replacement of a power switch about 15 years ago i have had no work done on them.


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Mitch Margolis
(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
March 10, 2001

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
1 to 3 months

Visitors rate this review
4.22 of 5, 9.00 votes

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Review 2 of 2

Price Paid:  $350.00 from via Audio Review classifides

Summary:

The Kenwood KT-917 is a remarkable "tour-de-force" example of a meticulously engineered FM tuner. It sounds good; quality differences between stations and assorted recordings are quite plainly audible. It's big: About 18 1/2 x 6 3/8 x 18 1/4. It's heavy: About 33 lbs. And it's loaded with real radio type stuff, which is aimed at boosting RF and audio performance. Stuff you'll likely never see again in modern FM tuners due to component and set-up expense. What kind of stuff you ask?

1. 9-gang (!) variable tuning capacitor for real front end selectivity, in addition to the filters in the Intermediate Frequency section. This keeps strong local stations from overloading the front end, allowing reception of unmolested distant signals.
2. Extremely quiet (low phase-noise) local oscillator circuit permits signal-to-noise ratio to reach 90 dB. No phase-locked-loop noise here...
3. Double-balanced mixer for I.F. conversion, usually seen in expensive commercial/industrial/military receivers. Best way to do the job though due to lowest harmonic and spurious output content.
4. Robust power supply has no slowly charring parts.
5. Dedicated multipath meter shows delayed-signal interference level. Great for pointing antennas either at the strongest signal, or more better, in the direction with the least multipath interference.
6. Low distortion "pulse-count" FM detector is free of the artifacts associated with conventional tuned-circuit demods, and does not drift or age.
7. Clever Distortion Detected Loop circuit monitors distortion caused by slight mistuning or multipath and slowly corrects errors until minimum possible distortion is reached.
8. Three I.F. filter bandwidths using Surface Acoustic Wave filters(!), rather than conventional tuned circuits. Tuned circuits can actually be pretty good, if there's enough of them, but they tend to need alignment periodically. SAW filters have better group delay and don't need occasional attention. This means the tuner will never start to sound fuzzy or congested over time due to IF component drift.
9. Sample-and-Hold 19 kHz pilot and 38 kHz subcarrier detection effectively ignores disturbances to sync pilot. This means that channel separation remains stable even when the signal strength is low.
10. Regenerated pilot from the S-and-H system is used to cancel the 19 kHz pilot carrier rather than using clunky and treble-damaging tuned circuits to filter the pilot out. Muy Bueno!
11. Multiple antenna connections. Multiple audio output connections, all low impedance. Multipath oscilloscope output permits visual inspection of the amount and severity of multipath content via 'scope screen. Basically shows AM multipath content versus FM signal spread. Handy for choosing optimum antenna direction.
12 . There's more but you get the idea.

What about the sound? All of these features do their part to bring in more and better quality signals then would otherwise be available. The result is that the differences in sound quality and character between various stations seem almost artificially exaggerated. Stations running modest amounts of limiting clearly stand out as capable of providing exceptionally satisfying audio quality. Good live broadcasts have an especially compelling sonic personality. And dog-squeeze broadcasts still sounds like dog-squeeze broadcasts; not much to be done about that except tune away!

The tuner doesn't impose any coloration of its own, but is instead quite neutral. Sound and music come through without that annoying tuner-homogenization effect one hears in the cheap stuff.

If you live, as I do, between two FM radio markets then the combination of features and sound quality makes this tuner the one to have!

Other audio system elements:
VTL de luxe 300W monoblocks (O.P.T. by Mercury Magnetics).
B&W 801 MKIII loudspeakers.

Strengths:
Very rigorous no-compromise design of RF,IF and audio stage design. Handsome cosmetics.

Similar Products Used:
Sony ST-S555ES, Scott LT-110 and 310 FM tuners.


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