Hitachi SR 903

I’ve always liked Hitachi. Often overlooked in hi-fi conversations dominated by the likes of Sansui, Marantz, Pioneer, or Kenwood, Hitachi quietly built some absolute masterpieces—and the SR-903 is one of them.

Released in 1977, the SR-903 is a solid, well-built receiver known for its clean design and excellent sound performance. It preceded the SR-904, which brought some cosmetic updates like VU meters. While those meters are cool, I personally prefer the classic 1970s look of the SR-903, especially with its solid aluminum knobs.

This unit is large and robust, delivering strong and dynamic audio:

  • Rated at 75 watts per channel RMS, but thanks to Hitachi’s Class-G topology (called “Dynaharmony”), it can boost power output up to 160 watts per channel during musical peaks without distortion.

  • It uses a 3-rail voltage system, a technique that few manufacturers mastered, resulting in better dynamic headroom and clean, controlled sound.

  • The sound is detailed and fast, with tight bass, crisp highs without harshness, and a natural, musical midrange.

Internally, almost every component is Hitachi-made, except the filter capacitors. The transformer is massive, and there’s an impressive number of discrete transistors, reflecting the company’s engineering expertise at the time.

As Stereo Magazine noted:

“It can produce a little more than 3 dB above rated power – twice its continuous wattage rating on transient peaks without clipping, rivaling many superamps… performance far exceeds what can be expected from a conventional 75-watt amplifier.”

The SR-903 is an underrated gem. If you find one in good condition, it’s definitely worth a listen and could compete with many more famous vintage receivers.

Specifications

Audio Section
Min. RMS Continuous Power Output (both channel driven):
75 W +75 W (8 Ω, 20-20,000 Hz, THD 0,1%)
95 W + 95W (8 Ω, 1 kHz, THD 0,1%)
105 W + 105 W (4 Ω, 1khz, THD 0,1%)
Music Power (IHF): 160 W + 160 W per channel into 8 ohms
Power bandwidth: 10 Hz – 50 kHz
Frequency Characteristics: 10 Hz – 30 kHz ±1 db
Total Harmonic Distortion:
At rated output : less than 0,1%
At ½ rated output: Less than 0,03%
Intermodulation Distortion:
At rated output : 0,1%
At ½ rated output: 0,03%
Input Sensitivity/Impedance:
Phono : 1,9 mV/47 k Ω
Aux : 150 mV/50 k Ω
Tape 1, 2 : 150 mV/50 k Ω
Adaptor : 150 mV/50 k Ω
DIN : 400 mV/120 k Ω
Output level
Tape Out :
150 mV : phono, Aux at rated input;
200 mV : FM 400 Hz, 30% dev. Input; 1 mV;
150 mV : AM 400 Hz, 30% mod. Input ; 1mV
DIN Out : 40 mV (phono at rated input)
Signal-to-Noise Ratio (IHF, Input shorted, A-network, rated power):
Phono : 75 dB
Aux : 87 dB
Tape : 87 dB
Damping Factor: 45 (1 kHz, 8 Ω)
Equalizer: RIAA ±0,5 dB
Bass Control: ±10 dB at 100 Hz
Midrange Control: ±6 dB at 1 kHz
Treble Control: ±10 dB at 10 kHz
Loudness Control: +9 dB at 100 Hz ; +4 dB at 10 kHz
High Filter: -8 dB at 10 kHz
Low Filter: -8 dB at 50 Hz
Semiconductors: 5 Ics; 1 FET; 57 Transistors; 62 Diodes; 1 Thyristor
FM Section
Frequency Range: 88 – 108 MHz
Usable Sensitivity (IHF): 9,3 dBf (1,6 µV)
Signal-to-Noise Ratio [Mono/Stereo]: 74 dB / 68 dB
Total Harmonic Distortion [Mono/Stereo]:
At 100 Hz : 0,2% / 0,3%
At 1 kHz : 0,15% / 0,25%
At 6 kHz : 0,25% / 0,3%
Frequency Response: 30 Hz – 15 kHz ±1 dB
Image Response Ratio: 85 dB
Spurious Response Ratio: 100 dB
IF Response Ratio: 100 db
Altenate Channel Selectivity: 80 dB
Capture Ratio: 1 dB
AM Suppression: 55 dB
Stereo Separation: 45 dB
Sub-Carrier Suppression: 65 dB
SCA Rejection: 65 dB
Muting Threshold: 14 µV
Antenna Input:
Balanced : 300 ohms
Unbalanced : 75 ohms
AM Section
Frequency Range: 530 – 1,605 kHz
Sensitivity: 300 µV/m (S/N 20 dB); 20 µV (IHF, ext. Antenna)
Image Rejection: 70 dB
IF Rejection: 90 dB
Selectivity (IHF): 40 dB
Signal-to-Noise Ratio: 50 dB
Antenna: Ferrite and separate terminal
Tape Monitor: 1,2
Speaker Switch: A, B, A + B
Speaker terminal: One-touch terminal
Power Supply: 100/120/220/240 V 50/60 Hz
Power Consumption: 615 W at 4 Ω; 430 W at 8 Ω
Dimensions (W x H x D): 490 x 144 x 400 mm
Weight: 13,5 kg (29,8 lbs)

3 thoughts on “Hitachi SR 903”

  1. I own one and yes this receiver has commanding power clean throaty bass clean sound ive got a hitachi made rca dientia power amp with it and wow what an amazing pairing , the pairing put her right up onto as far as im concerned and I may add a Japan made hitachi eq only to clean up the amp a little but amazing surprise to any ear . To me for all makes of its time have no competitor to put up against this powerhouse unit

    1. Hello Brian.
      Thanks for sharing your opinion.
      I ended up selling my Hitachi, but I miss it, so if I get the chance to buy one I will…
      From what I remember it didn’t natively have a preamp output and main input, correct me if I’m wrong.

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