Sansui D90 Review -
Where many decks of the era rolled off sharply at 16 kHz, the D90 claims a frequency response of 20 Hz to 19 kHz (±3 dB) on metal tape. Listening to a digital source recorded onto the D90 reveals the truth: the deck does not "soften" the transients. The attack of a snare drum remains sharp; the sibilance of a vocal is present without becoming strident. This is a neutral deck. It does not warm up the sound (like a Marantz) nor artificially sharpen it (like a low-end Technics). It simply reproduces what is on the tape with an eerie lack of its own character.
Furthermore, the user interface is cryptic to modern eyes. There is no auto-calibration for bias; one must use a small screwdriver to adjust fine-bias trim pots while watching a Lissajous pattern on an oscilloscope (or trusting your ear). For the novice, this is frustrating. For the enthusiast, it is heaven. The Sansui D90 is the "sleeper" of the golden age. It lacks the cult pricing of the Nakamichi Dragon (which often sells for $3,000+) but offers perhaps 95% of the performance for a fraction of the cost. Its weaknesses are few: the fluorescent peak meters, while beautiful, are prone to dimming with age, and the belts (now 40+ years old) almost certainly need replacement. sansui d90 review
In the pantheon of vintage hi-fi, certain names evoke immediate reverence: Nakamichi for its Dragon transport, Revox for its Swiss precision, and Tandberg for its dynamic actuation. Yet, nestled within the shadow of these titans is a machine that, for a brief period in the early 1980s, achieved a level of sonic purity that still confounds modern listeners: the Sansui D90 . Where many decks of the era rolled off