My Marantz AV 8003 went down yesterday, suddenly. There was a clear blue sky with no problems on the electric grid.
This unit was bought new from a licensed Marantz dealer Hi-Fi Sound of Minneapolis and installed in my No. 1 AV rack 18 months ago. Thank goodness it has a three year warranty.
Until yesterday the unit was rock solid stable with no problems ever before.
Now there is whole house surge protection. The studio has its own dedicated sub panel. The unit is powered via an APC smart UPS.
The unit has excellent ventilation in the rack. There is obsessional grounding of all racks. The unit was checked to well bonded to the rack by the mounting brackets. The chase has an air extraction system, above the power amp case and two high flow AC ducts. The unit which consumes 60 watts has always run cool.
You can see plenty of room above the unit.
I used the unit after I got up to catch up on the news. No problems.
A couple of hours later I intended to listen to FM radio.
On switching on the Marantz AV 8003, the unit clicked and the red stand by light blinked. I unplugged the unit several times. The result was the same. The unit will not power up to allow a reset.
So the unit was removed from the rack, put in its original packaging after removing the rack mount kit, and returned to the dealer.
Fortunately I was coming to the Twin Cities yesterday. Also I'm leaving for England in less than two weeks for a month. So I hope the Marantz service department have this sorted out by the time I get back.
This is the second reported failure of one of these units on these forums. The previous reporter was in the Far East, and Marantz did not prevent further failure after at least a couple of returns.
So I hope Marantz US do a lot better.
I have the strong impression that domestic AV equipment has less than a stellar record of reliability.
This unit has no sources of heat, like amps round it and was obsessionally installed.
I have asked for a full report on this unit from Marantz and an accounting of every component replaced.
This unit is far too expensive to be considered a disposable item.
As I have stated before, the best gear, and the gear I have most respect for is the vintage gear.
There is no vintage AV gear that is suitable, and at this rate I doubt there ever will be.
On the bright side, I can easily route all my audio gear through my trusty vintage Quad 44 pre amp and on to the crossover. I can change to my analog bass management at the flick of a switch.
I can watch TV downstairs which uses pretty much entirely vintage equipment and seems to be the better for it.
I have an increasingly jaundiced view of modern, manufacture and not just electronics.
I have just discovered an absolute outrage concerning my Yamaha F150 out board motor and will report on that disgrace shortly in the Steam Vent.