i once worked at a TV and audio repair shop and found this unit on the pile of what was going to be thrown away. Fixed it and it was a fun thing to have in the 90's as a electronics guy
I have to think some of the original owners of these were concert goers. You could sneak in the recorder part and bootleg a concert with stereo recording then go home and patch cord it to a full size Cassette Deck. I agree its a fun oddball. Thanks for watching and the comment.
My uncle worked at the landfill and brought something almost identical to this home. It looked just like this unit but without the TV and a full size cassette deck with logic controls. It had the most amazing sound for 3" speakers and was very well made.
Hi. I did just put this one up on eBay. Its about the oddest boombox I’ve seen. Using a micro cassette as a high fidelity source was such a novel idea. Thanks for your comment.
@@alsguitars5127 They at least tried to turn it into a HiFi format, but it was never going to work. As the Techmoan video I mentioned elsewhere suggested, they tried using metal tape and decks to overcome the quality limitations, but that made it too expensive for something that still sounded disappointingly mediocre.
I think buyers asked the same question. But would have been sweet in 1982 to sneak into a concert with a stereo micro recorder. Maybe that was thought. Thanks for watching.
Wow, what a strange and rare beast. Someone actually thought that the microcassette would make a listenable music experience lol. Anyone who's heard a dictation machine will tell you that it is one of the worst audio mediums known to man, besides the early experiments with carbon on paper in the mid 19th century haha
@@alsguitars5127 Techmoan had a video covering a standalone "Hi-Fi" Microcassette deck which also used metal tapes, and I think this was a standard feature of their failed attempt to turn it into a "serious" music format. IIRC the conclusion was this was pretty much *necessary* to offset the format's poor audio quality. And despite that use of metal tape- and the fact that it made the unit correspondingly expensive (probably comparable in price to a really nice-sounding "regular-sized" metal cassette deck)- the sound was still disappointingly flat and mediocre. So it's no surprise that the attempt to push Microcassette as a music format went nowhere.
I LOVE this! Reminds me of models that I used to dream about owning when I was 10-12 back in 1982-84!
@@ForgottenMachines it is a cool unit. Thanks for watching
i once worked at a TV and audio repair shop and found this unit on the pile of what was going to be thrown away. Fixed it and it was a fun thing to have in the 90's as a electronics guy
I have to think some of the original owners of these were concert goers. You could sneak in the recorder part and bootleg a concert with stereo recording then go home and patch cord it to a full size Cassette Deck. I agree its a fun oddball. Thanks for watching and the comment.
My uncle worked at the landfill and brought something almost identical to this home. It looked just like this unit but without the TV and a full size cassette deck with logic controls. It had the most amazing sound for 3" speakers and was very well made.
This one too produces a wide stereo effect for small speakers. Thanks for watching and for your comment.
this thing would have been such a flex back in the day. bad ass
Finally appreciated all these years later. Thanks for watching.
I don’t suppose there’s a model/part printed number anywhere on the removable microcassette recorder unit by any chance?
@@ThatKomputerKat Model 3SVA410. Hope that helps you.
I like this boombox
Its a very odd product in all ways. Well built. TV is a great performer! Thanks for watching!
I really really hope to find one of those one day so cool and even more cool it has a color tv and microcassette
Hi. I did just put this one up on eBay. Its about the oddest boombox I’ve seen. Using a micro cassette as a high fidelity source was such a novel idea. Thanks for your comment.
@@alsguitars5127 They at least tried to turn it into a HiFi format, but it was never going to work. As the Techmoan video I mentioned elsewhere suggested, they tried using metal tape and decks to overcome the quality limitations, but that made it too expensive for something that still sounded disappointingly mediocre.
That's cool but the heads of your cassette mechanism are probably filthy, it should sound much better.
They were dirty but I have cleaned them now. They were not that bad but the demo tape was poor quality. Thanks for watching.
...with removable MINI CASSETTE-Player/-Recorder; WHO in this world needs this? 🤣
I think buyers asked the same question. But would have been sweet in 1982 to sneak into a concert with a stereo micro recorder. Maybe that was thought. Thanks for watching.
Too bad that radio isn't picking up music from it's era.
Something for next time. Thanks for watching!
Strange to cram a tv into a stereo
This product was the answer to a question no one was asking. It is pretty cool though.
Think of it as an early early predecessor to the iPhone :)
Wow, what a strange and rare beast. Someone actually thought that the microcassette would make a listenable music experience lol. Anyone who's heard a dictation machine will tell you that it is one of the worst audio mediums known to man, besides the early experiments with carbon on paper in the mid 19th century haha
So true, however very few attempted a metal tape capable stereo one. So while the format is not good for fidelity, this is as good as it got.
@@alsguitars5127 Techmoan had a video covering a standalone "Hi-Fi" Microcassette deck which also used metal tapes, and I think this was a standard feature of their failed attempt to turn it into a "serious" music format.
IIRC the conclusion was this was pretty much *necessary* to offset the format's poor audio quality.
And despite that use of metal tape- and the fact that it made the unit correspondingly expensive (probably comparable in price to a really nice-sounding "regular-sized" metal cassette deck)- the sound was still disappointingly flat and mediocre.
So it's no surprise that the attempt to push Microcassette as a music format went nowhere.
Ой гуцалык муцацалык гуцацюнька гуцаца 💋✌️💋👍
Thanks for watching!
Pitfall
One of the shortest falls Pitfall Harry gets on that little screen! Thanks for the comment.