Up for sale is this vintage Technics Stereo Lot 
Receiver SA-R277, Cassette RS-TR155, CD Player SL-PC10
Includes Remote & Remote cables
These pieces have been tested and found to be in excellent cosmetic & functional condition, includes remote control and in/out remote control cables, see photos. 
Carefully packaged for shipping, may be shipped in more than one box.
This sale includes a Technics SA-R277 Quartz Synthesizer AM/FM Home Stereo Receiver. Unit is fan cooled, has 7 band EQ, Video in, Video out, VCR1, VCR2, CD, Tuner, Phono hookups, 24 AM/FM presets, 2 AC Outlets. Unit has been fully tested, all functions work and it sounds great.  Unit comes with the power cord and remote control. This is really a top quality receiver from 1989 made in Japan, and here is your chance to get one at a great price.

Technics designed the SL-PC10 like an old-fashioned turntable. You lift the CD player`s transparent lid to load the discs on a large turntable that looks something like a big daisy. Each of the five daisy petals holds one disc. You can look through the cover to see which discs are loaded while the SL-PC10 is playing. Better still, you can raise the lid and change four of the discs while the fifth one plays.

The front panel contains all the controls and displays of a full-featured CD player. A fluorescent display indicates which track on which disc is playing, as well as being switchable between four time modes. A tiny animated display shows the discs going around in a circle as the daisy platter rotates. You can program 20 selections in any sequence from among the five discs. A random-play mode shuffles all the tracks on one disc and then moves on to the next disc, until all the tracks on each disc have been played in random order. The repeat-play mode replays each disc, or replays the selections you`ve programmed.

The SL-PC10`s performance is not what you`d expect from its modest price. While the featherweight unit seems flimsy, it withstands considerable abuse. You can authoritatively slap its top and sides without the disc mistracking. Vibration from being on the same surface as shelf speakers fails to faze this player. The SL-PC10 tracks discs with aplomb.

The famed Technics linear motor transport moves the laser in a flash. The SL-PC10 skips from the first to last track of a disc in about a second. It takes the changer about five seconds to skip from one disc to another.

Technics uses dual digital-to-analog converters in the SL-PC10, one for each channel. A quadruple oversampling digital filter provides smooth sound. While the SL-PC might not have the ultimate sound of a Revox or a top-of-the- line Technics or Sony, it certainly doesn`t trail them by far. As we`ve said many times, differences between CD players tend to be subtle. You sacrifice no sound quality between choosing a single-disc player or this CD changer at $290.