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With unknown condition, £85 looks fair and a touch friendly against your used-market anchor: it sits below the £93 median but above the £76 25th percentile, so this is not a bargain-bin score, yet it is still a sensible buy if it’s complete and working. I’d read it as solid value rather than a steal.

These are handy little network audio boxes: a compact way to add HEOS streaming and system control to a conventional setup, especially if you want easy multi-room use without a full streamer overhaul. The main upside is convenience and flexibility; the main thing to check is that it powers up cleanly, connects reliably, and includes the right PSU and any needed cable/remote extras, since missing bits can eat into the value fast.

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

About Denon

Denon traces its origins to 1910, when American entrepreneur Frederick Whitney Horn founded Japan's first audio equipment company, Nipponophone, initially focused on gramophones and records. The Denon brand emerged in 1939 from the merger of Japan Denki Onkyo—combining "den" for electricity and "on" for sound—with other entities, marking a shift toward professional audio development. This heritage includes pioneering Japan's first professional disc recorder in 1945, used to capture Emperor Hirohito's voice, and launching the nation's first long-playing records in 1951.

The brand excels across a broad spectrum of hi-fi categories, from amplifiers, turntables, and tuners to loudspeakers, cassette decks, and phono cartridges. Denon's innovations extend to digital frontiers, such as the world's first practical PCM recorder in the early 1970s, the inaugural CD player in 1981, and early home theater systems with Dolby Digital in 1995. Today, its lineup encompasses AV receivers, headphones, wireless streaming solutions like HEOS, and high-channel processors, blending professional-grade components with consumer accessibility.

Denon holds a commanding position as a mid-to-high-end mainstay in the hi-fi market, revered for its blend of technological firsts, robust build quality, and balanced sound signatures that appeal to discerning enthusiasts. No longer a vintage collector's niche, it competes confidently against premium rivals, backed by over a century of audio leadership and strategic partnerships like its merger with Marantz.

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