@catlad
...Continued
I'm sure that the Technics is a perfectly reasonable amp. Being a mid-70s model, it's a little before my time of buying Hi-Fi. I recall hearing a mid-70s Pioneer receiver (amp with a tuner) coupled to a very nice Ariston turntable which looked like the spiritual father of the famous 80s Linn Sondek, and hooked up to some KEF Concord III speakers. To my 14-year-old ears it was all a sonic revelation. I never knew that records could sound so good. Then again, the system cost somewhere in the region of £1500+ back in the day when terraced houses were changing hands for £8000, so that puts it in perspective.
Pretty soon after, I began my own Hi-Fi buying journey. Within a year I had a decent turntable, amp and set of speakers that put a huge smile on my face. Total budget under £600. The system belonging to my mate's dad went a bit deeper, and was a tad sweeter with a little more resolution. But it wasn't three times better. Instead of all the toggle switches and dials, my amp had three controls and an On/Off switch. I had volume, source selection, record-out selection and that's it. No tone controls, no subsonic filters or rumble switch, and not even a balance control. It didn't need them, although balance would have been useful on occasions. Everything about purist Hi-Fi in the 80s was all about getting the best sound from the gear rather than providing a whole bunch of toys to fiddle with to 'fix' something in the sound that really wasn't broken. As it turned out, getting rid of all these extra circuits in the signal path was a greater benefit to the music performance of an amp.
If you want something that will sound lovely, then there's an A&R Cambridge ARCAM Alpha amplifier on a buy-it-now for £69. It doesn't look as flash as the Technics, but in a straight fight it has more real power output, and sonically it would kick the bejesus out of any Technics amp at close to the same money. It also has a terrific headphone stage. You could run some really high-end headphones from the socket. Better still, the seller says that the Alpha has been serviced, and it may even be local to you as it's in Rossendale. This is the sort of amp you could partner with today's £1000+ floorstander speakers and a really good streaming front end and blow your socks off. It would likely be better than anything you or your neighbours have experienced unless they're serious Hi-Fi nuts themselves.
Going beyond the Alpha (that's if you want to spend bigger and fancy remote controlled volume) I have a friend in Hazel Grove with a big Yamaha amp that has just epic power reserves. It has been sat in a box since he upgraded(!) to a pre-amp/power amp combination. I have to say though that the Yamaha is huge. It would be like your old amp twice the height and twice the depth. It's a mammoth beast. I think it weighs around 20 Kilos.