Wednesday, 31 October 2012

Technics SL-P8



Technics 1st generation cd player

$800 in 1983 and surely the worlds first pitch control on a cd player. Nice looking and a fair weight, draw is smooth and there's a tinted window so you can watch your discs spin. TOC read is almost instant, even if general use is touch and go at times. Also has a remote control, sadly mine is missing.

96db dynamic range
90db channel separation
0.003% distortion @ 1Khz
Technics own 16bit  dac (AN6806)
6% +/- pitch

Technics sl-p8 vintage cd player





Technics sl-p8 vintage cd player
Technics sl-p8 vintage cd player
Technics sl-p8 vintage cd player

Technics sl-p8 vintage cd player laser














6 comments:

  1. I really enjoy working on these beasts (The SL-P8) I have found that no two units i pick up have the same issue. I recently restored the one i had grown up with in my fathers stereto system and found it to be the best sounding player , taking me back to my childhood as this was the first player ever brought into our house, purchased by my dad in October 1983, for roughly $869.99 I still have the receipt. I can say even though completely restored, new capacitors , diode etc. it still is very quirky. But once it plays it goes all day. I even made a fan pair to sit on top the unit to pull out the heat, as it gets very hot inside these if you let them on for a long period of time. But this IS the best ever I have seen.. Doesnt compare to my Sanyo DAD8 or the Hitachi DA-800's I have (one black and one silver) I recently acquired an SL-P10 , none working but it will be soon. Thanks for posting your SL-P8.

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    Replies
    1. Hi Adam, thanks for your comment, $870 in 1983, that's some serious money! This particular player came from a boot fair years ago, I saw the pitch control and simply had to have it. I still cant get over the fact this vintage player has a pitch control !!!

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  2. I bought a silver SL-P8 in 1984 at the Marine Corps Exchange in Iwakuni, Japan. A nice Yen rate allowed me to pay a good deal less than $870! I hate tape hiss. Dolby was not good enough. CDs sounded so much better than ANY tape! I play violin and viola, and it is easier to tune the cd player to my instrument than vice versa, so the tempo control was a must have feature! I paid a great deal more money to get it. Other excellent players without it were much cheaper. I wore my player out! I still have my first CD discs though.

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  3. I just restored my silver SL-P8. It was purchased for $800+ in 1983-4 and I still have most of the sample discs which came with the player.

    It's working again after a simple fix, the laser pickup belt wasn't gripping and a little belt conditioner fixed that. Took care of the loader belt while open and then replaced all the LEDs since some had gone bad, but I may go back in to replace the pause LED, since the new one is too bright.

    I did love looking around inside there. My favorite part was the spindle motor with the 4 flat-coil layout on the board. I think that looks really cool! I didn't take a picture, and can't find one on the net.

    Did you restore the disc clamp pads? Mine don't look as good as your and I used the belt restore on the rubber and will see if that helps. I'd like to replace both the top and bottom pads if there's a good part to use but I don't know what to use.

    I nearly destroyed my headphones finding out that jack isn't working correctly!

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  4. I just fired up my old black SL-P8, original owner. The CD tray kept opening and closing and worse, it only wanted to play the first few tracks of any CD. By track 6 or 7 I could hear clicking noises, presumably as the laser was trying to read. I had replaced the two small belts some 15 years ago but I started there. Belts looked fine but I cleaned them anyway. The problem ended up being the laser was catching as it moved along its two rails. After some light oil and working it back/forth a few times I was now moving smoothly. Compared to replacing cassette deck belts, this was easy to get at and assess the problem. As for the tray opening and but not staying open, I think there may be an adjustment I could make or a dirty switch that senses the end of the trays travel, but it's not a big deal because it doesn't happen every time and if you hold the tray it will stay open.

    I love this player, especially the rare pitch control feature (although its little red LED went out years ago). I still have the remote and the Telarc classical sampler CD that came with the deck. Remember the "index" feature where you could jump to certain points within a track? This early generation has it, but after a few years disc makers all but dropped programming indexes on their discs. Everybody listens to MP3's these days but audiophiles know CD's sound better- they may not be analog for the purists but they are not squashed to bits either. I'm going to have to part with my SL-P8 though because I've been selling off my CD collection that's been taking up too much space.
    Steve, 3/11/2021

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  5. Pls what eur number is the remote controll, thanks

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