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A neat little 70s-era integrated, and £65 looks like a good buy rather than an ambitious ask. Recent UK-used chatter puts these roughly around £80 to ££120 when working and clean, with rough-and-ready examples sometimes changing hands closer to £30 to £40; at £65, this sits comfortably in the middle of that band and below the more typical asking level.

What makes it worth a look is the classic Nikko presentation: punchy, slightly warm, and very much of its era, with enough character to be enjoyable on efficient speakers. If it’s genuinely working and cosmetically decent, the upside is solid for a vintage piece like this. The main buyer check is condition: because age can bring noisy controls, tired switches, and service needs, it’s best when the seller can confirm clean operation and any original knobs or lids are present.

Independent perspective — not a price guarantee. Always verify condition, accessories and provenance before purchase.

About Nikko

Nikko Audio emerged from Nikko Electric Industry Co., founded in 1933 in Kanagawa, Japan, initially as a manufacturer of fuses and electrical equipment for the national railroad. Post-World War II, the company expanded into communications technology, entering the hi-fi market in the late 1960s through the influence of an audiophile family member with exceptional hearing. This Japanese heritage fueled a brief but notable run of precision-engineered audio components before the brand shuttered its audio division amid the 1990s market downturn.

The brand focused primarily on amplifiers, producing standout series like the Alpha line of power amps from the late 1970s and early 1980s, and the high-end TRM series, including the 1975 TRM-800 integrated stereo amplifier with its robust 65 watts per channel output, NEC power transistors, and stability down to 4 ohms. Tuners such as the FAM-600 and compact hi-fi gear rounded out their compact-form-factor offerings, emphasizing clean circuit design and no-frills power over expansive categories like speakers, turntables, or modern digital components.

Today, Nikko holds a cherished position among vintage collectors, prized for its build quality and dynamic sound that rivals contemporaries from more prominent Japanese marques. Though limited in distribution during its era, these components endure as attainable high-fidelity treasures, evoking the golden age of Japanese amplification engineering.

See all Nikko listings on RADAR.

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