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McIntosh MC-275 MK-V Tube Amplifier, Mint and Complete

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Pickup currently unavailable at SkyFi 479

Mcintosh Mc-275 Mk-V Tube Amplifier Mint And Complete

McIntosh MC-275 MK-V Tube Amplifier, Mint and Complete

SkyFi 479

Pickup currently unavailable

479 South Broad Street
Glen Rock NJ 07452
United States

+12018790000

This is the fifth iteration of this classic and well loved design which many believe to be the best. Let your ears be the judge.

Like new with very low hours of use.

Complete with manual, box, tube cage, all inner packaging, and power cord.

Very very slight signs of use showing an occasional finger print or swirl mark on the chrome from cleaning.

Otherwise looks new. Everything works as it should.

This is your chance to add a modern classic to your collection which is sure to appreciate over time.

Will probably outperform the stock market over time :-)

From Stereophile:

Description and Design
Like the MC275 of yore, the current model is rated at 75Wpc (though McIntosh Labs' tech man, Chuck Hinton, says it can actually pump out 90Wpc), and it weighs the same 67 lbs. Much of that heft comes from the two output transformers, which are, with the exception of one quality, identical to the original's, even to the point of being wound on the same equipment at McIntosh's production facility in Binghamton, New York. The wire in the old transformers was made of lacquered copper, which tended to harden and become brittle. The new wiring is still copper, but it's insulated with a far more durable synthetic material.

The MC275's transformers utilize the same "unity-coupled circuit" that McIntosh invented in 1947. The two primary strands—one connected through the power supply to the plate and cathode of one of the output tubes, the other connected in the same manner to the other tube—are tightly wound together, turn for turn, for complete magnetic coupling. This creates almost instantaneous local feedback, which is said to reduce distortion. In the original and all subsequent versions of the MC275, including this one, a third winding is connected to the plates of the cathode follower driver; this was said to extend the ultra-low distortion over a much greater bandwidth, especially into the high frequencies.

Also like the original, the new MC275 uses four KT88 power-output tubes, three 12AX7A input and phase-inverter tubes, and four 12AT7 voltage-amplifier and driver tubes.

All else, though, is different from the original, to varying degrees. The chassis, once chrome-plated steel bent to shape (and thus prone to cracks and rust), is now highly polished stainless steel. The tube cage, formerly of fine mesh with solid ends, now has larger perforations and slotted ends, to allow more even ventilation. (When listening, I removed the cage, in part because I liked watching the tubes glow, and in part because, in my experience, cages of this sort usually vibrate. First, however, I received assurances from McIntosh that the cage was entirely for safety purposes, and that removing it wouldn't harm the sound.) The plating on the tube pins, once nickel, is now gold, and the ceramic output-tube sockets have heat chimneys that let cool air flow more freely from under the chassis, thus prolonging the life of the tubes—a McIntosh innovation that began with the MC275's fourth incarnation.

The new model also uses 1% precision resistors and polypropylene capacitors, for lower noise; the specified signal/noise ratio is 100dB, or 10dB higher than the original's. Balanced inputs have been added; a rear-panel switch lets you choose that option, and if you do, the first 12AX7 tube is bypassed for a more direct connection, though this results in lower gain. The original MC275 had several circuit boards, with all component parts wired point to point. The new version has just one military-grade board, on which the components and tube sockets are directly mounted. Hinton maintains that this results in less induced noise and crosstalk. A rear-panel switch allows the amp to be converted into a monoblock, with the two channels driven in parallel to cope more efficiently with low-impedance speakers.

Finally, the new model has a detachable power cord and an On/Off switch (though, as it's placed under the terminal panel, it's a bit awkward to get at). More welcome still, the old-fashioned terminal strips for speaker cables have been replaced by gold-plated, five-way binding posts. This is the only significant change since the version that Sam Tellig reviewed—very positively—in the July 2004 Stereophile.

Description: Two-channel, tubed stereo (switchable to parallel mono operation) power amplifier. Tube complement: four KT88, three 12AX7A, four 12AT7. Inputs: 1 pair single-ended (RCA), 1 pair balanced (XLR). Loudspeaker outputs: separate gold-plated, 5-way binding posts for 4, 8, and 16 ohms. Preamp output: 1 pair single-ended (RCA). Inputs: 1 pair balanced (XLR), 1 pair single-ended (RCA). Output power: 75Wpc (18.8dBW) into 4, 8, or 16 ohms (stereo), 150W into (21.8dBW) 2, 4, or 8 ohms (mono). Frequency response: 20Hz–20kHz, +0/–0.5dB; 10Hz–70kHz, +0/–3dB. Signal/noise ratio: 100dB, A-weighted (no reference level given). THD: 0.05% at any power level from 250mW to rated power output. Input sensitivity: 1.2V unbalanced, 2.5V balanced. Input impedance: 90k ohms unbalanced, 180k ohms balanced. Damping factor: >14 (wideband). Power consumption: 170W (idle), 360W (full power).

Dimensions: 16.5" (420mm) W by 8.25" (210mm) H by 12" (305mm) D. Weight: 67 lbs (30.5kg) net, 75 lbs (34.1kg) shipping.

Manufacturer: McIntosh Laboratory, 2 Chambers Street, Binghamton, NY 13903-2699. Tel: (800) 538-6576, (607) 723-3512

Read more at: https://www.stereophile.com/content/mcintosh-mc275-power-amplifier-specifications#o7Cm6LZExD0rzo17.99

SKU: McIntosh MC-275 mkV