Unlike the standard consumer fare of the time, the D-1 was built like a battleship. It eschewed the cheap op-amps and single-bit noise-shaping converters that were becoming popular. Instead, Marantz went all-in on a dual mono design using the legendary DAC chip—part of the "Bitstream" generation, but implemented with a level of care rarely seen outside of studios. The Secret Sauce: Dual Mono and Copper Chassis Open the lid of a D-1, and the first thing you notice isn't the circuit boards—it’s the absence of interference.
The unit features a physical copper partition separating the digital and analog sections. This isn't marketing fluff; it's electromagnetic warfare. By isolating the noisy digital processing from the delicate analog output stage, the D-1 achieves a noise floor that is cavernously black. marantz project d-1
If you see one gathering dust at a garage sale or a used audio shop, do not walk past it. It is a forgotten jewel of the digital domain—a reminder that great sound never goes out of style. Unlike the standard consumer fare of the time,
If you have never heard of it, you are not alone. If you own one, you are likely holding onto it for dear life. The D-1 was the cornerstone of Marantz’s ill-fated but brilliant "Project D" series. This was Marantz’s ambitious attempt to enter the high-end, no-compromise separates market during the early days of the CD format’s maturity. The Secret Sauce: Dual Mono and Copper Chassis