Walkman II : The Do-over. The start of something small

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  • Опубліковано 18 гру 2024

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  • @jeffhughes1318
    @jeffhughes1318 Рік тому +715

    Excellent. I just wish you'd actually modelled it all on a tool belt!

    • @andymerrett
      @andymerrett Рік тому +27

      Sony missed a trick not creating one (maybe they did)

    • @Deebz270
      @Deebz270 Рік тому +9

      .... Whilst climbing a cell tower...

    • @_sabot
      @_sabot Рік тому +24

      Batmoan

    • @1974UTuber
      @1974UTuber Рік тому +4

      ​@@Deebz270You mean an AM or UHF CB repeater tower to be chronologically correct.
      There were no cell towers in 1981

    • @ggeudraco
      @ggeudraco Рік тому +1

      I think the belt would sag 😉

  • @skree_fpv436
    @skree_fpv436 Рік тому +214

    I remember asking for a Walkman for my birthday when I was a little kid in the early/mid eighties. I got one but it was FM radio only version. It wasn't exactly what I wanted but I was still happy and grateful to have it. It was my first ever piece of audio equipment.

    • @Blitterbug
      @Blitterbug Рік тому +35

      Same here. Not all parents could afford about £180 for a portable music player in the mid 80s. That's like £500 today, probably.

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  Рік тому +126

      My first personal stereo was a Saisho that cost a tenner. My second was also a Saisho that cost a bit more (perhaps £20) because it had a radio and a five band graphic equaliser. There’s zero shame in buying what you can afford.

    • @Blitterbug
      @Blitterbug Рік тому +36

      @@Techmoan Exactly! I was so chuffed I took my pocket (stereo!) radio to my friend's house and his dad (who had a grand's worth of JVC seperates) indulgently asked for a listen and complemented me on its sound. Made me feel proud as hell.

    • @heathwellsNZ
      @heathwellsNZ Рік тому +31

      I vividly recall being given an FM radio similar in size to a walkman... with headphones and belt clip. The most vivid memory was the shock of discovering that there were in fact no FM radio stations to actually listen to! This was in Christchurch, New Zealand and we only had AM until the early 80's! All I could listen to was taxis getting calls from their base and talking to each other! It was several years before I was able to actually use it to listen to the radio!
      Ahhh... many a morning waking up to find the radio you placed under your pillow, so as not to alert parents you were doing it, was left on coz you went to sleep... and now your batteries were flat!

    • @EVPaddy
      @EVPaddy Рік тому +8

      As I didn’t have any home stereo or anything like that at the time, and my original ‘walkman’ (not a sony) broke and we could get a new one for half the price, my mother agreed on buying one with built in radio and recording possibility (don’t remember the brand). It had autoreverse and was tiny (it had an external stereo mic ‘block’). But sound quality of the recording at least were abysmal. I got a Discman in 1986 and haven’t look back to analog music since then. Got a DAT around 1989 to copy CDs.

  • @AndyBHome
    @AndyBHome Рік тому +26

    I really do remember thinking "what's the big deal?" when the original Walkman came out. It seemed like we already had players just like it, but with the ability to record. What I didn't realize was that it was stereo and in conjunction with the small, light, open back, rare earth magnet headphones, it produced sound that was superior to what a lot of people had at home. So a lot of the success, I believe, was due to the quality of the experience of listening to music on them.

    • @mike04574
      @mike04574 2 місяці тому

      Were there portable players that were convenient like it though?

    • @AndyBHome
      @AndyBHome 2 місяці тому

      @@mike04574 Yes. Absolutely. That was why I was surprised that anyone cared at first. Small players like it had existed for almost 10 years. What hadn't existed was high fidelity STEREO players that could reproduce truly high quality sound into very small, lightweight, portable headphones before. Everything that had existed to that point was mono and made primarily for voice recording, so they didn't sound great with music. It was like the difference between listening to music on your phone's speaker versus playing it through a decent sized BlueTooth speaker. The headphones were half of the innovation that made the Walkman so valuable and such a hit. Prior to the development of those tiny headphones, everything else was much larger, bulkier, and likely not very good sounding. The original Sony headphones with the brightly colored foam pads were a direct imitation of Sennheiser audiophile headphones that had been out for 6 or 7 years already. However, the plug on the fancy Sennheisers would not have fit the Walkman, and they likely also would have required too much power. So the Walkman headphones paired with the player were key to its success.

  • @jtr159
    @jtr159 Рік тому +211

    Mat, I just realized I've probably been subscribed to you for ten years now. Stumbled upon your channel to see some random dashcam I think. Thanks for always educating us and showing stuff most of us have never heard of. I've watched every single video and will keep doing so. Your channel is just the best!

    • @SimonGreen85
      @SimonGreen85 Рік тому +7

      Time certainly does fly. It's been a pleasure to watch his videos

    • @awdadwadwad1723
      @awdadwadwad1723 Рік тому +3

      I stumbled upon this channel over 7 years ago when I was looking for reviews of Cambridge Azur amplifier, which I soon got too. I’ve watched every single video here since then haha

    • @JohnKobaRuddy
      @JohnKobaRuddy Рік тому

      Remove your tongue from his rectum

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Рік тому

      I think i came upon it when he was reviewing a Honda motorcycle and a 3-wheel motorroller or two. And then stayed on to watch the 808 keyfob spy camera reviews. Watched every vid since as well.

    • @eyeamstrongest
      @eyeamstrongest 11 місяців тому +1

      was watching regular car reviews about 10ish years ago, one of the videos mentioned techmoan and i thought this channel looked interesting enough

  • @jameslocke1416
    @jameslocke1416 Рік тому +28

    I’ll never forget my first Walkman-style tape player I had, from the summer of 1981. I won it on the Boardwalk in Atlantic City, and it was a very chunky, crudely built machine with buttons that would pop off when you pressed Stop. It was white, which showed every smudge clear as day, and had the cheapest headphones I’ve ever seen to this day, but it was *mine*, and eleven-year-old me couldn’t have been prouder of it! I didn’t even own any tapes when I first got it, but thankfully it had a fiddly, staticky AM/FM tuner. Good memories!!

  • @fridgemagnet
    @fridgemagnet Рік тому +94

    In November 1983 for my 13th birthday I received my first walkman, a Sony WM-7. My father had a friend who worked for a petroleum company and who regularly flew around the world for his job, so he asked him to pick up walkman in duty free from Tokyo airport in Japan. I was a hero at school with my Auto Reverse, Full Logic Control, Remote Control on the headphones and Dolby B. I was spoiled from then on, the sound quality was light years ahead of the cheap plastic units most people had. The Thriller album on chrome tape, Ah such memories !! I still have the WM-7, it's currently with Dr Walkman under going a restoration. I currently listen to a WM-DC2 from 1985.

    • @lounisphotography
      @lounisphotography 11 місяців тому +1

      I still have thriller on chrome tape!

    • @mike04574
      @mike04574 2 місяці тому

      Was there any difference in the Japanese version?

    • @fridgemagnet
      @fridgemagnet 2 місяці тому

      @@mike04574 not as far as I am aware.

  • @PhineasPhlob
    @PhineasPhlob Рік тому +32

    Brilliant, really enjoyed that. Bonus points for the 'jock itch' ad in the first magazine. Negative points for making me remember I sold my WM-22 for £4 at a car boot sale.

  • @volvo09
    @volvo09 Рік тому +190

    A portable graphic equalizer and a portable DBX decoder, wow! Those must be quite rare these days.

    • @thesteelrodent1796
      @thesteelrodent1796 Рік тому +16

      later on Aiwa and Panasonic integrated both of those features into their portable cassette players, but I don't recall Sony ever bothered

    • @BobWiersema
      @BobWiersema Рік тому +15

      If it was made in the 70's it would have had a disco ball attachment as well. 😁

    • @joshuascholar3220
      @joshuascholar3220 Рік тому +4

      I owned the equalizer, mostly because it could get louder than a walkman or a diskman could by itself.

    • @serratusx
      @serratusx Рік тому +3

      the equaliser sells for about £300-400 nowadays. There was a saisho equivalent which also fetches a very high price

    • @krzysztofczarnecki8238
      @krzysztofczarnecki8238 Рік тому +3

      There are new portable headphone amps with a graphic equalizer that has actual sliders rather than an app, like Jaben Oriolus SE02 (but it's pretty chonky and costs $300)

  • @mr.y.mysterious.video1
    @mr.y.mysterious.video1 Рік тому +34

    I recall walking into an audio shop on the main street of oxford in the 80s and seeing an entire glass cabinet of very expensive sony models, some with recording and external mic abilities apparently aimed at pros and other tiny models. They were certainly objects of lust

  • @Nezuji
    @Nezuji Рік тому +246

    As a little kid in the mid-80s, my Walkman was indeed the old original model. It had been my father's, and he handed it down to me as an old, second-hand device that wouldn't be missed if a little kid like me lost or ruined it.

    • @Troppa17
      @Troppa17 Рік тому +12

      My first Walkman was an WM-EX23 handed down from my sister as she bought a new one.

    • @nesagwa
      @nesagwa Рік тому +17

      That's why in GOTG he has an old model of walkman. It and the mixtape were gifts from his mom.

    • @randomdestructn
      @randomdestructn Рік тому +7

      Same. I used the original one and the orange headphones until I got an updated one in the early 90s.

    • @lancairw867
      @lancairw867 Рік тому +10

      Yea I thought the same thing. Could had been a hand me. I was the youngest and in the 80s I had many hand me downs 😂

    • @AnonymousFreakYT
      @AnonymousFreakYT Рік тому +5

      Yep. I had a similar-size Aiwa big boxy one as a kid in the late '80s. The only difference is that my Aiwa could record. I prized my portable recorder. Purely for recording FM, I didn't have a microphone.

  • @squareeyz
    @squareeyz Рік тому +7

    I got the original Walkman as a Christmas present in the early 80's. Mine came with a plastic grey Sony carry case and shoulder strap, and a special FM radio cassette receiver, which was hopeless . I literally played this thing all the time until it died. Thanks for the memories.

  • @65CJ5
    @65CJ5 Рік тому +104

    I worked at an A/V shop that was a Sony distributor when the original walkman came out. We sold as many as we could get. Full list price, no deals, no sales! People loved them.

    • @jimgillert20
      @jimgillert20 Рік тому +11

      They were a status symbol at work.

    • @gu_gu
      @gu_gu Рік тому +5

      They were under-priced

    • @neriozulberti1492
      @neriozulberti1492 Рік тому +3

      @@jimgillert20twenty years later apple Ipod 😊

    • @the_once-and-future_king.
      @the_once-and-future_king. Рік тому +4

      'No deals, no sales!' is exactly the rhetoric that caused things like Amazon to come about, and people to shop there. There's no incentive to 'shop local'

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 Рік тому +3

      @@the_once-and-future_king. That's true. I remember when the NES Mini came out, and I had the option of trying to find one on the shelf at a local shop for $90, or buying one on Amazon for $200. Which I did. It was counterfeit. Thank heavens for the Internet, eh??

  • @davegesell5470
    @davegesell5470 Рік тому +17

    That setup at the end is absolutely madness, and I loved it!

  • @parthabhatta1963
    @parthabhatta1963 27 днів тому

    I am 61 and I grew up in the walkman days. I had a Sony walkman and then an Aiwa but I never had any idea about these walkman add ons produced by Sony. Thanks to the internet, youtube and last but not the least- this Techmoan channel I came to know about these gadgets now. Thanks to Techmoan for his R&D and his great intentions to find, collect and show these things to audio gadget lovers like us. Feel great that I am a subscriber of this channel since last few years. 👍👍👍

  • @TaralgaBushAdventure
    @TaralgaBushAdventure Рік тому +56

    When I was in high school in 1980, I remember one of my classmates had one of the Walkman I's , and we spent a swimming carnival listening to loud stereo on headphones, just amazed at it. Then a year later, same kid had Walkman II (with external D cell battery pack), and we were just shocked at the size of it.

  • @ThomasHope73
    @ThomasHope73 Рік тому +11

    Such nostalgia! Being 17yo in 1990, the peak of the cassette, it was very much the music medium of my teens.
    Never saw anyone with the paraphernalia at the end though. We'd just carry rechargeable AA batteries, and it was common to have a tape or two on you, at any time.

  • @izimsi
    @izimsi Рік тому +44

    biblically accurate Walkman setup

    • @bobmcbob4399
      @bobmcbob4399 Рік тому +4

      In other words - all lies.

    • @drworm5007
      @drworm5007 Рік тому

      ​@@bobmcbob4399 I believe it and I'm considered by my peers an intelligent person.

  • @deepsleep7822
    @deepsleep7822 Рік тому +67

    I remember when they first came out and thought that were rather expensive. I did eventually get one but it was many years later. It had FM radio with a preset option and a digital clock. I still have it.

    • @davidb.6681
      @davidb.6681 Рік тому +6

      I can't remember the model, but I had a Sony one that had a small LCD screen with 5 preset buttons under it. Even after the belt wore down I still used it for the radio because it seemed to pick up every station and the audio quality was pretty good.
      I wish I still had it.

  • @Thats_him_with_the_daft_hat
    @Thats_him_with_the_daft_hat Рік тому +5

    14:11 My dad made his own D cell adaptation to my old Alba. He cut down an old datacorder power cable and used an old torch body as a battery pack. Four good solid solder points and hey presto!

  • @snapsnappist4529
    @snapsnappist4529 11 місяців тому +1

    I was born in '79, so I had a few of personal stereos when I was a kid back in the 80s and early 90s (Sharp, Aiwa, even a crappy Bush player that didn't have a rewind function) but never a Sony. Way, way too expensive. The top line models back in the late 80s were over £100, which was an obscene amount of money at the time.
    Other models may have sounded good, but Sonys were without doubt the most beautiful of all. State of the art Japanese industrial design and precision engineering. They're just another electronics corporation now, but there was something magic about Sony back then.
    I'm trying to imagine how many pages it would take to illustrate every product that Sony put out. It would probably run into the thousands.

  • @PaulMiller-mn3me
    @PaulMiller-mn3me Рік тому +62

    Mat’s videos are a ray of sunshine through the clouds

    • @KasparOnTube
      @KasparOnTube Рік тому +7

      yes! part of nice weekend morning!

    • @schitlipz
      @schitlipz Рік тому +3

      Like glorious bangers and mash.

  • @tschak909
    @tschak909 Рік тому +3

    The one thing I loved about the TPS-L2 was the hot-button. It never made it out of the first unit. It was excellent for quickly responding to people who were talking to you.

  • @Thats_him_with_the_daft_hat
    @Thats_him_with_the_daft_hat Рік тому +39

    Agreed. Personal stereo cassette players certainly evolved quickly.
    My first was a saisho - straight outta Dixon's. It had an FM tuner but no rewind! FF>> only.
    My last one, purchased 1992, had auto reverse, no tuner, bass and treble sliders, megabass, Dolby sound and excellent sound quality.
    My final model was an aiwa. In-between I'd used Sony, alba, Lloydtron, Philips and a few "own brand " models, like the saisho.

    • @6581punk
      @6581punk Рік тому +5

      I got nostalgic for a Boots (PS88) one I owned and found one that's like new. But the biggest drag I find is batteries, I really detest buying disposable AA batteries and rechargeable cells are lower voltage.

    • @wisteela
      @wisteela Рік тому +2

      My first was a Saisho like that too, but with 3 band graphic equaliser.

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Рік тому +4

      I hated the FF only tape players, I had one for a while.

    • @wisteela
      @wisteela Рік тому +1

      @@volvo09 Was really slow too

    • @RBzee112
      @RBzee112 Рік тому +3

      I had AIWA's too. I eventually got a SONY when I found a lost one 😊.

  • @10p6
    @10p6 Рік тому +8

    Nice. I remember about 1989 I wanted to buy a portable tape unit for my trip to collage, and I ended up buying a small Panasonic unit with auto reverse and record as it was still quite a bit cheaper than a standard Walkman even then.

  • @ashkitt7719
    @ashkitt7719 Рік тому +27

    tfw it's 5 AM and I catch a Techmoan video.

    • @GearHzMusic
      @GearHzMusic Рік тому +2

      4am for me. Can’t fall asleep lol this is perfect

    • @alaraswings8535
      @alaraswings8535 Рік тому +1

      Heh, it's 1 30 pm for me and I'm supposed to go to my extra tutoring school, yet here I am, watching techmoan haha

    • @xgford94
      @xgford94 Рік тому +1

      Hello from 8pm😂

    • @TechTokOffical
      @TechTokOffical Рік тому +1

      It's like 8am tomorrow over there lol...

  • @xmds2062
    @xmds2062 Рік тому +1

    Thanks Matt for this great video. My father was often in Japan on business in the early to mid-80s, and we also had Japanese people visiting us at home. Once he received a Walkman II as a gift including two headphones with the orange Walkman button, the carrying case, the strap and the external battery case.
    When he mentioned that he was going skiing in winter, they also gave him two special, "aluminium" coated, original Sony thermo strap carrying cases. One for the Walkman, the other for additional cassettes. I didn't see these in your video, they would probably be extremely rare today.
    My sister and I used the Walkman much more than my father (who travelled a lot), unfortunately there is nothing left, at some point it was "gone" and I had switched to a D99 Discman.
    Thank you for this journey through time.
    P.S. Unfortunately, my parents didn't allow me to use the thermo-wrapped Walkman on the ski slopes...........😢

  • @tcpnetworks
    @tcpnetworks Рік тому +63

    I always had AIWA stuff. It was a little bit cheaper, but typically had more features. I ended up with a recording Sony in the early 1990's - and it had Dolby and all the good stuff. By 1995 - everything went to CD.

    • @johnsmith-i5j7i
      @johnsmith-i5j7i Рік тому +4

      The earbuds with my aiwa personal tape deck were awesome of the best sounding stock. Can't remember the model, but the body was metal, took a square battery but had option of two AA/AAA in an external plastic housing.

    • @mankepoot9440
      @mankepoot9440 Рік тому +7

      I couldn't afford a Sony neither, mine was also an AIWA.

    • @stamfordly6463
      @stamfordly6463 Рік тому +4

      I seem to recall that Aiwa stuff was usually more plasticky and busy looking but had the longer description in the Argos catalogue due to having more bells and whistles. When you're that age and spending your own Christmas/pocket money you probably care more for features you'll possibly never use than cool design.

    • @chrishart8548
      @chrishart8548 Рік тому

      ​@stamfordly6463 I had an aiwa. Mainly because it was so small. It took 2 aaa batteries to but them in you opened the cassette door took the cassette out and they went under where the cassette would be. The didn't last very long. It was from argos. Must have been around 1994

    • @christopherrigby2798
      @christopherrigby2798 Рік тому +2

      My first own brought one was Aiwa HG-S 35. Sounded excellent on type II and top end type I tapes like Maxell XL1-s and TDK's AR. I only transitioned when the MiniDisc appeared starting with Sony playback only model and then a sharp portable recorder.

  • @ocker2000
    @ocker2000 Рік тому +15

    My WM-7 died years ago, but I still own that D battery holder and the EQ. Nice to see you are bringing the younger generation up to speed on Walkman history.

  • @Bren0780K
    @Bren0780K Рік тому +189

    Admit it, back in the day if you were wearing all those devices on your belt at once, you were thinking to yourself "I'm Batman"😁

    • @SG-gc7mn
      @SG-gc7mn Рік тому +4

      Not really!

    • @bvfgfvbgch4853
      @bvfgfvbgch4853 Рік тому +5

      ​@@SG-gc7mn lol

    • @iantk17
      @iantk17 10 місяців тому +8

      i would imagine something more like.
      I am the coolest guy at this school with my portable hifi system.

    • @allwayzactive4599
      @allwayzactive4599 5 місяців тому +1

      I don't know about that bro

  • @HappyMinds1
    @HappyMinds1 Рік тому +19

    That was tremendous. I have never been so moved by a retrospective in my life. By the end of this video I had a memory awash with fellow music lovers decked out in all of this kit.
    The only thing, the only small thing I wish this video had, was a Matt with all of these on his belt, ready for stomping the streets.
    A finer piece of media will never be made by this channel or any other ever again.
    We have peaked.

  • @themightyimp08
    @themightyimp08 Рік тому +21

    Props for you featuring Electro 4 on CC in this video.
    I have the Electro series on Vinyl, and would scour the record stores weekly for the next in the series to come out.. great memories!

    • @benji.B-side
      @benji.B-side Рік тому +3

      Same here, I have the Electro series on vinyl. I'm an old school Break Dancer. 😉

    • @dries74marocben8
      @dries74marocben8 Рік тому +3

      Electro 10 ; Dynamic Duo "Knights Of The Turntables" great memories indeed.

    • @gregoryhayball
      @gregoryhayball Рік тому

      ​@@dries74marocben8Johnny The Fox and Transformers, that takes me back a long time. Played it a lot but my favourite was definitely Electro 5 though.

    • @DavidFrankland
      @DavidFrankland Рік тому +2

      I've got almost all up to 11 on vinyl. The one that stands out though is Electro 4 as it's the one that introduced me to the series. I had it on tape, recorded from a friend, so didn't buy the vinyl until many years later. I still think it's possibly my favourite along with Crucial. Breakin in Space sounded like something from the future 🙂

    • @Fluteboy
      @Fluteboy Рік тому

      The Cybotron track _Techno City_ featured a sample of a voice clock - which ended up being reviewed by *VWestlife:*
      ua-cam.com/video/gZPxPDdIqkU/v-deo.html

  • @meandmyEV
    @meandmyEV 2 місяці тому

    You make such a good point about most of us not being able to afford a real walkman. I travelled with a touring musical group when I was in college and while a few people had the yellow "sports" walkman, the vast majority of us carried other brands. I distinctly remember spending about $20 on a General Electric branded cassette player that did not last an entire tour but I used it for hours every day on the bus until it broke.

  • @baroncalamityplus
    @baroncalamityplus Рік тому +5

    I was still using the original Walkman in 1987. My house hold was a bit unusual. My Dad loved everything Sony. Even had a Sony Reel to Reel. So when the Walkman came out, he got one for himself and mom. A few years later I got his original when he upgraded to the new one.

  • @anakondase
    @anakondase Рік тому +2

    Me and my best mate at the time often sat on the bus listening on my original walkman. We used the button to speak to eachother, that was easier than lowering the volume or taking our headphones off. I thought it was an awesome feature.

  • @thisisnotachannel
    @thisisnotachannel Рік тому +5

    I pulled a model 2 Walkman (same as the one you showed, but blue instead of red) out of a basement I was emptying out about 2 months ago... thought I had found an excellent piece of tech history... it was even in near mint condition, externally. I had a blue one as a kid, and it was my favorite thing for a few years.
    But when I opened the battery compartment?
    Leaky batteries, acid all over everything on the inside of the tape deck too... damned batteries must've leaked til they were empty. I didn't open it up, but there is no way that acid didn't leak in to the mechanical parts...
    I had to toss it. No salvaging that.
    I cried a little 😋

  • @billmankin6204
    @billmankin6204 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for this one, brings back a lot of memories. When I had my first Sony branded Walkman in 1982, it was a budget model that took 4 AAs, and there was no external battery pack available. I was going on long trips for school that year and wanted the longer life, so a trip to Radio Shack and $13 in parts later, I had cobbled together my own. Weighed close to a Kilo, but I didn't care since I was sitting down and didn't have to carry it and could leave the pack when I did need to. Good times!

  • @randywatson8347
    @randywatson8347 Рік тому +52

    Ahhh yes. Still got both of them in my collection. Both replacing the rubber bands was easy, but the later DD has that dreaded plastic gear.
    For me the WM-10 is the true innovation in terms of miniturization in 1982. The size was exactly the same as a cassette case when there is no cassette in it andd retracted.

    • @briantaylor9266
      @briantaylor9266 Рік тому

      I used to have a WM-10. Not sure if I disposed of it somewhere along the line, or whether it's buried with other antiques.

    • @thomashounsome7737
      @thomashounsome7737 Рік тому

      I have a wm1 with the dreaded gear as well.

    • @babygerald4645
      @babygerald4645 Рік тому +3

      The WM-10 was a work of art. The sliding case was so slick and it was built rather strong for being so small. In the late 80s a friend of mine had two and gave me one. This was a few years after its debut when it was distinctly surpassed by newer tech but it was still a marvel then. My favorite in the entire Walkman line was the WM-600. I had one in white and I swear Steve Jobs used it as the inspiration for his walkman-killing iPhone which would feature a similar jog wheel style input.

  • @jlitagibfonseca
    @jlitagibfonseca Рік тому +13

    As always, an interesting, curious, well-produced and entertaining video. Congrats, Matt!

  • @Kabelkerl
    @Kabelkerl Рік тому +39

    Finally a nice cassette video again, thank you very much. But I think I have to disagree about StarLord, especially as the son of a single mother, the old Walkman fits perfectly at that time. As a small child, you often got the worn-out things of the older ones, even when it came to technology. His mum certainly couldn't afford any new expensive technology, so it fits perfectly

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  Рік тому +40

      I think you missed the point of that section… I said the exact thing that you use as your argument against what I said in the video. You’re agreeing with me.
      06:01 - “Now I understand that it’s a fantasy film and you can come up with some kind of back-story that it had been handed down through the family…“
      I followed that up by saying that a lot of people who weren’t around at the time now think that the Walkman most people were using in 1988 was the one featured in a fantasy film (set in 1988 with this backstory) whereas *the reality of day to day life in 1988* was that the vast majority of personal stereo users were neither A) Using a Sony…or B) Using a TPS-L2.

    • @Kabelkerl
      @Kabelkerl Рік тому +6

      @@Techmoan Youre right , maybe i mussunterstand that part , cause it reminded me a little of my own past :)

  • @franzspirk6064
    @franzspirk6064 Рік тому +3

    What a story out of a "simple" Walkman Mat’s did. I still have a DD Walkman but I had no idea about the adds on. Well done

  • @dream.machine
    @dream.machine Рік тому +6

    This is so cool! I only caught this a few minutes after you posted.
    Thanks for the in depth info about the Sony Walkman.

  • @justjoe7313
    @justjoe7313 Рік тому +3

    Kudos for getting all the parts together!!

  • @OzRetrocomp
    @OzRetrocomp Рік тому +4

    16:34 Thanks for that. Now I have "Wired for Sound" by Cliff Richard stuck in my head.

  • @dunebasher1971
    @dunebasher1971 Рік тому +24

    I remember that a typical cost-saving measure of the majority of the non-Sony personal stereos was that they didn't rewind, they could only fast-forward. Many car stereos were the same. If you wanted to be able to rewind, you had to be prepared to pay a fair bit more.

    • @itme999
      @itme999 Рік тому +6

      Oh man, i haven't thought of that in years. Turn over the tape and fast forward 😂

    • @ally7055
      @ally7055 Рік тому +2

      Yes! My yellow Grundig 'Beat Boy 30' had that. Still loved it, though.

    • @peterrenn6341
      @peterrenn6341 Рік тому +4

      "In my mind and in my car - we can't rewind we've gone too far" - oh hang on that was video wasn't it? ;-)

    • @AvidRetro
      @AvidRetro 11 місяців тому

      Yes I remember them, even have one now as part of a Neostar Record Player / CD / Cassette Combo!

  • @PJD_55
    @PJD_55 Рік тому +3

    I bought an LPS2 in 1979 while I was in Hong Kong, before it was available in UK and US. Still have it and still working. The orange head phone pads fell apart years ago though. Great vid as always but the only point you missed Mat was the main reason of the hotline button was the ability for one user to talk to the other. I won’t ever sell it despite the crazy prices being asked as I consider it a piece of history.

  • @Fluteboy
    @Fluteboy Рік тому

    7:29 - One of my favourite albums in 1984/5. I used to play tracks 2 and 3 to death! _"The scratch, the bass, the congas in your face!"_

  • @jaymzx0
    @jaymzx0 Рік тому +3

    You mentioned the cost of a Walkman back then compared to the cheap brands. I remember I always wanted one of those Sony 'Sport' Walkmans - the yellow ones with the digital tuner. They went for around $100 USD back in the mid 1990s - which is about $200 USD today with inflation. I was a teen and couldn't afford it but liked to look at them. I know we're used to cheap electronics these days but back then $100 for a cassette player was 'reasonable for those who can afford it, but a luxury nonetheless'.
    One day I was hanging around down by the downtown mall and I found a like new Sony Sport walkman hidden in a plant container! I'm pretty sure it was stolen or dropped, but it was mine now (hey I was 15 yrs old). It was the most well-refined tape player I had ever used. The tuner worked beautifully and rarely has issues with fading or static on FM.
    As what goes around comes around, someone stole it from my backpack when I was in math class one day. I sure missed it.

  • @simonhodgetts6530
    @simonhodgetts6530 Рік тому +1

    I had a DD-33 - it was a beast of a thing - built like a tank, solid, and sounded amazing. It was my university tape deck, mated with some excellent Sony SRS-170 powered speakers (which I still own). A true ‘Rolls Royce’ (well, actually more like Volvo) quality Walkman. I sold it a couple of years ago - spares or repairs (the central drive cog had broken - a common fault). Even broken I got £150 for it!

  • @BobBell808
    @BobBell808 Рік тому +6

    It's funny how these retro-tech videos bring back selective memories. When you thought of the early Walkman you went back to school-age kids riding a bus. When I remember my earliest memories of Walkmans I'm in college at a summer arts camp, lying on a lake shore, with the music director on a beach towel in a speedo, listening to Chariots of Fire by Vangelis... different memories.

  • @markjamesmeli2520
    @markjamesmeli2520 Рік тому +2

    You opened up a floodgate of memories, thanks, reminding me that I say goodbye to my 50's in about six months! As, from your memory of many personal stereos, but not many Walkmans - I saw a good deal of Walkmans back in the day, but NEVER a Walkman Two. And I never saw any Sonys that had a "record" option. Did they sell them in the US? Mine was the basic model, purchased in late 1984. It suited me well for what I wanted it for (tapes of my worn out records). By 1987, I was using my Walkman as an overdub deck for home demos, etc. I was in the workforce, so wearing a Walkman was a strict no-no. It was time to get a good deck for my car then.

  • @yanks1fan09
    @yanks1fan09 Рік тому +3

    My father sold the original Walkman TPS-L2 wholesale so I got on of the very first in the US for $125.00 USD. I remember recording REO Speedwagon's Hi Fidelity over and over. One thing you forgot to mention about the WM-3 black version was it offered the ability to play Metal Type tapes which was an improvement over the original. Personally, I think the best walkman is the WMDC6 which I also own. Growing in the 80's and having a dad in the business afforded me opportunities to own many high end stereo components.

  • @dorklyasmr6017
    @dorklyasmr6017 Рік тому +1

    My dad worked at Sears in the US and thus bought me the Sears knock off version around 82 or 83. And like every sears knockoff, it completely missed the point of the original. Far from being a small thing you could sort of fit in your pocket, it was HUGE, and built insanely solidly. Volume wise it might have been a full 75 percent bigger than even the original walkman. It also took four double A batteries (And ran through them like candy). My dad bought be a battery charger and batteries; but at the time the technology sucked. So while AA batteries were SUPPOSED to put out 1.5 volts; these only put out 1.25 volts. So in the end the player needed 6 volts; but got only five. And the result was that everything played just a little bit slower than it was supposed to. I got so used to hearing the slower versions that I was convinced radio stations were playing speeded up versions to fit in more commercials or something.

  • @daviatorcustoms3168
    @daviatorcustoms3168 Рік тому +6

    The tech savvy (but poor) amongst us knew of the additional devices you cover in this video, but pretty much none of us acquired them, as, no one I knew could even afford the walkman 2 alone, let alone all the add-ons. Even if they COULD afford all this gear, they never really bothered with the extra gizmos and just stayed with the walkman 2 by itself. I remember thinking when I saw the walkman 2 in the Sears catalog, I think, the equalizer unit was pictured right next to it and part of some bundle deal. That was probably the most likely way people were getting these accessories because Sony didn't seem to be going out of their way to advertise them and many stores weren't carrying the accessories. I remember thinking too, that the equalizer being sold as a completely separate device was kind of ridiculous since, for the price they were charging for the Walkman 2, Sony should have included one ON the unit itself. My feelings were apparently echoed by other manufacturers, as the next year or so later, Aiwa introduced a personal stereo model with a 3 band graphic equalizer, a model I own and is still in perfect working order. Later models from Aiwa as well as other manufacturers had 6 band equalizers built in as well.

  • @jeffreyroberts7438
    @jeffreyroberts7438 Рік тому +1

    I had one in 1987, whatever model that was, they were great. I’ve recently found my mini disk player, still sounds fantastic!👍 just a brilliant vid👍👍

  • @stragulus
    @stragulus Рік тому +32

    Yeah, like most, definitely had the later gen cheaper walkman, only by the time I hit 40 I finally got my hands on a TPS-L2 which I lovingly restored.
    I will say though, in the later 80s over the ear phones in the Netherlands were still very much a thing. Orange color and all!

    • @6581punk
      @6581punk Рік тому +2

      I can't remember what I used. The advantage of headphones was being able to take them off and have them rest around your neck.

    • @indiegun
      @indiegun Рік тому

      Maybe it's just me, but earbuds were not commonly used in my memory until the late 90s and early 2000s. I know they existed long before that but I saw no common use in my day to day life in the mid eighties through the nineties.
      My own Panasonic portable always sported a foam 'over-ear' headset from 1985 all the way till Hurricane Katrina took it from me 20 years later. Everyone I knew used the foam over-ear sets. We all constantly put our headsets on our friends' heads to show off our latest musical finds and NO ONE liked the idea of shoving soiled buds into each other's ears. I still wouldn't do that now.
      If one does a Google image search for "1980s Walkman headphones" it will be pretty obvious what the norm was back then. Even Marty McFly used them in the movie scene Mat used in this video. Earbuds were hardly a blip in common usage back then. Perhaps it was different in the UK or perhaps Mat and his pals were a localized exception.

  • @KarolWolosiewicz
    @KarolWolosiewicz Рік тому

    11:07 One thing worth mentioning.
    In DDII there is only one flywheel.
    I have recently repaired one of those, "anti rolling mechanism" refers rather to a function that disengages pinch roller as soon as take up plate does not spin any more (tape is stuck, or just ended)

  • @toms5996
    @toms5996 Рік тому +3

    I just love physical media. I, myself, still have a portable MiniDisk player plus a desktop stereo system with a 5 MiniDisk changer. I would watch all videos on this channel even if they were only of MiniDisk😄
    Edit: Absolutely brilliant video. I didn't know much of Walkman's history at all.

  • @ericriggert9231
    @ericriggert9231 Рік тому +1

    A DAK catalog! As soon as I saw that hyperbolic "Pocket Concert Hall" title, I knew I was looking at an old DAK catalog from Southern California. It was the gadget source of it's time.
    My first "Walkman" was not a Sony either - too expensive. Even just having cassette functionality at that time was expensive. But the Walkman craze spawned a series of AM/FM radios in Walkman size format, with the same kind of headphones. These were a million times nicer than the same-sized 9V AM transistor radios they replaced. I had a Mura Hi-Stepper, and the sound quality was, to me, at 13, amazing.

  • @beastmastreakaninjadar6941
    @beastmastreakaninjadar6941 Рік тому +6

    I had a version of the Walkman that actually was the size of a cassette case, as long as you didn't have a tape in it. lol It was barely thicker than a tape case for the drive mechanism, but the height and width were the same and it would actually fit in many cassette storage cases alongside your tapes. It worked, sort of like a Transformer, by sliding the head and electronics section out to a wider position so the cassette would fit inside. But it also had FM radio, so you could still just walk around with it in its more compact form. Amazing, really, considering it still had to house a battery along with the electronics. WM-F10, I think after a quick search.

  • @darrenjones5885
    @darrenjones5885 Рік тому +1

    I bought a WM2 from Rumbelows in a January sale with money from a part time job at Kwik Save when I was in 6th form. That makes it Jan 81 or 82. It came with two sets of headphones and the D Cell battery pack. Everyone was amazed at a player barely bigger than a cassette.

  • @digi_056
    @digi_056 Рік тому +270

    It would be interesting to see how close we could get to a cassette case sized player with today's technology.

    • @baritonfelix
      @baritonfelix Рік тому +61

      Not that much closer than Sony already did I don't think. Although a flat Li-Ion battery would surely help. And of course not even Elon is going to splash out on that project.

    • @kanalnamn
      @kanalnamn Рік тому +60

      There were players smaller than cassette cases already in the early 90s - perhaps earlier. I had a Panasonic. In the 80s there were the Hitachi CP-88R that were significantly smaller than a cassette case, but a bit thicker. The tape stuck out the side of it, looks kinda odd.

    • @lexion8152
      @lexion8152 Рік тому +65

      These devices don't exist anymore because we can't design or create these things any more. That's why all modern cassette players use cheap chinese components. The engineers of yesterday run circles around modern day ones.

    • @stragulus
      @stragulus Рік тому +19

      @@kanalnamn The Sony WM-10 'cheated' and was smaller than the cassette itself. Until you actually put one in obviously. But that was early 80's so with today's tech that most certainly could be even tinier (and more reliable!). Still a very cool walkman though. But indeed it's never going to happen as no one is going to build a compact quality mechanism from the ground up anymore.

    • @uncled39
      @uncled39 Рік тому +13

      We couldn't. Have you seen the new cassette players?

  • @siwynjones
    @siwynjones Рік тому +1

    I can confirm that when I became a teenager in 1989, I was still using a hulking great big Sanyo M-G7SP with a missing FF button, that had been handed down by my uncle. The original headphones were long gone, but it did have matching Sportster speakers. I replaced it with a smaller £7.99 Alba unit from Argos. Sony Walkmans were what the kids off the posh estate had.

  • @nestrac
    @nestrac Рік тому +4

    The add-ons's for the WM-2 just reminded me that i resently purchased a Bluetooth transmitter for my Sony MD walkman so I can use it with my headphones without a loose cable dangling ... Just for the convenience of it.. You can still mod your equipment with some modern(ish) stuff

  • @kevinarmstrong478
    @kevinarmstrong478 Рік тому

    I had one in the tank bag of my motorcycle in 1991 and a box of 6 tapes which made Perth to Melbourne Australia much more pleasant I still have the Triumph but sadly the Walkman is long gone!
    Great video Thanks.

  • @SharpblueCreative
    @SharpblueCreative Рік тому +13

    I had the original WMII back in the 1980’s. Had two in the end with the belt clip & extension battery pack. Loved it and still have one.

    • @dalfifran7572
      @dalfifran7572 Рік тому

      Interesting, I've never seen anyone with extension battery, EQ, or other sort of accessory.
      But then again, Sony is waaay too expensive, so i've seen mostly other brand like Aiwa and Panasonic.

  • @midimoog
    @midimoog Рік тому

    My dad bought me a WM-2 at Sam Goody's as a birthday present. I don't know how I convinced him into buying such an expensive thing, but I still remember that day. WM-2 came with a demonstration cassette tape: "Jungle Strut" on side A and "Grieg Piano Concerto" on side B. I remember because this was the only Stereo recorded tape I had at the time. Funny that I didn't have a stereo recorder yet...

  • @Spearca
    @Spearca Рік тому +26

    I did live through the '80s, and this is the first time I've seen a Walkman component system. 😁

    • @schitlipz
      @schitlipz Рік тому +1

      I know, eh?

    • @jimgillert20
      @jimgillert20 Рік тому +3

      If i had known about and had the $$ to buy a D-sized battery pack i would have gotten it day one.

  • @sniper441
    @sniper441 Рік тому

    Your videos are the big treat at the end of the week that I always look forward to. Thank you so much for these.

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape Рік тому +5

    You are correct about the price of Sony. In the early 80s my parents got me a General Electric clone that was similar to the others on that catalog page. I used it for a quite a long time, though I remember the stock headphones were less than stellar. I eventually got a pair of Sony MDR-40 headphones which I absolutely loved. I still have them in an old drawer somewhere in the hope that I can figure out how to fix them, because they sounded better than any other on-ear headphone I've used since.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Рік тому

      I have had a Walkman back then and i have the SONY headphones that i got in the late 80s, and they are OK, not great. SONY headphones that look sort of similar by purpose, obviously not the exact same but vaguely similar dimensions and also metal headband and light open foam covered cups, 30mm driver, but which i bought new in mid 2000s sound LOADS better. Other good open and light on-ears i have here are by Sennheiser, also from mid 2000s, couldn't decide which of them i like more, probably SONY. Then there's of course Koss PortaPros and the Koss clip on headphones (which can be converted to headband type) and i can't make up my mind on whether i like them or not, i can see them being both attractive and controversial.
      Yes you can very much fix them if you can solder, or get a friend to do it for you. There's no shame in sacrificing dollar store earphones to get a fresh wire, though ideally better earphones come with more durable wire. You can even upgrade them with a mic/button/headset feature, imagine that!

  • @KarldorisLambley
    @KarldorisLambley Рік тому +1

    i think my first personal stereo, around 1982/3 was an aiwa. the cassette went in it in landscape orientation, it had 2 3.5mm jacks, each with its own volume control, and it had a built in mike, that operated at a button press, to allow the user to hear his surroundings, should he wish. i wish i still had it.
    it still amazes me that personal stereos worked on only 3 volts. the efficiency of analogue electronics, and no big screen, no doubt.

  • @c128stuff
    @c128stuff Рік тому +3

    The 'hotline' feature did make an earlier comeback in the late 1980s and early 90s on some of AIWA's hs-jx line of personal stereo systems. For example the hs-jx505 (1990) has a microphone built into its wired remote control, which can be used for recording, but also for picking up sound from your environment and mixing that with either radio or tape playback. Of course, as those devices can also record, it makes a bit more sense to have a microphone, and when you have that mic anyway, adding this is trivial.

  • @robertlawrence9000
    @robertlawrence9000 Рік тому

    I was born in 77 and I can remember in the mid 80's to 90's going to yard sales and finding older cassette players and record players. Every now and again I would purchase one for very cheap. So probably around 1988, I had some gently used players that may have came out in the 70's and 80's. I can see how that could be a possibility in the Guardians of the Galaxy movie.
    Nice video you have here! I would like to see more on brand comparisons of these. Sound quality, internals and build. Thanks for the content!

  • @ve2vfd
    @ve2vfd Рік тому +5

    Gotta say, in 1981 or '82 I had a Sony WM-8 Canadian Edition (has a maple leaf on it instead of the US model with a star) which I won off a TV station contest. I ended up using that walkman for 6-7 years before upgrading to a smaller more recent model.
    Strangely enough, most walkman lists online do not include the WM-8, but it was popularised by appearing in Stranger Things and as a consequence, sells for insane amounts on ebay.

    • @willitbend7262
      @willitbend7262 Рік тому +1

      I was able to get a Canadian WM-8 Walkman for $5. It just needed new belts. That was a few months ago. The coolest thing about it is that it’s red instead of grey.

  • @djgreenhornet2892
    @djgreenhornet2892 Рік тому +1

    The Walkman setup is so cool!

  • @ingridfong-daley5899
    @ingridfong-daley5899 Рік тому +4

    Not just Guardians of the Galaxy--that same year, the original walkman was featured prominently in Deutschland 83 also--that's what reignited my imagination re: the original Sony walkman. I got my first one (the blue w the orange button and orange foam phones) for Christmas in 82 and I've basically never taken my headphones off since then.

  • @edwardbianchi192
    @edwardbianchi192 Рік тому +1

    Great stuff as always. I really enjoy when you put the pictures of the what was offered in catalogs. Would love to see more photos and stills of those catalogs. It takes me back to “window shopping “ of what I would like to buy.

  • @CTCTraining1
    @CTCTraining1 Рік тому +3

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane... trying to hear my Walkman over crashing and clanging of the underground.
    You made an interesting point about tape types and although I can remember some being more expensive than others my tin ears didn’t seem to pickup on much in the way of difference ... could that be something to cover?
    Keep up the great work 😀👍

  • @glbernini0
    @glbernini0 Рік тому +1

    Got out of high school in 86 & had several versions of the cassette walkman. The coolest one ever was the rubber coated outdoorsy version! Way bigger & heavier than it needed to be!

  • @elsviec
    @elsviec Рік тому +5

    thanks for the bedtime story dad

  • @ronpat13
    @ronpat13 Рік тому

    Thank you for sharing the electronics history. In the middle 1980s I worked at Radio Shack (Tandy in the UK) and sold knock-off walkmans. I never told my manager but my youngest brother had a first generation walkman and it was superior to what we sold. Cheers.

  • @DonVintaggio
    @DonVintaggio Рік тому +4

    9:11 the hot line button was added because of the many people listening to loud levels they basically went isolated from the outside world, thus it was sort of a requested feature for a portable player that people used while doing a lot of activities simultaneously, and when someone talks to you or you just wanted to know if your doorbell ringed, well you just quickly pressed that big button (without even looking at it or having to remove headphones or sliding down TWO volume sliders and then having to restore them to previous levels) in less of a second.
    And that's how millions developed tinnitus 30+ years after.

  • @leedesigner1977
    @leedesigner1977 Рік тому

    Third time I've watched this, definitely making me feel rather nostalgic of my own technological journey as a young pup in rural Derbyshire. I had a similar Sony unit briefly as a cast off from my cousin - sadly it was already pretty knackered though. My weapon of choice was mostly Aiwa stuff though. I remember a black personal stereo with turquoise accents, a 3 band graphic equalizer with a set of nice earphones... but, always had the grey Sony in-ear headphones (Turbo Bass) as these things were the best (for me)!! I'd love a set of them things again - they are crazy money though!! Cheers Matt, another fantastic video. Lee

  • @uniktbrukernavn
    @uniktbrukernavn Рік тому +19

    16:47 Imagine walking through airport security with all that historical accuracy 😂

    • @radry100
      @radry100 Рік тому +2

      No Security in the 80s

    • @thewiirocks
      @thewiirocks Рік тому +1

      @@radry100there were metal detectors. More similar to entering a government building rather than the TSA nonsense we have today.

  • @starsINSPACE
    @starsINSPACE Рік тому

    I was in preschool in 1995. A lot of little kids (say 3 - 8 years old) had special cassette players with big buttons that were easier for kids to pick out and press. Some notable ones where the "my first sony" branded ones that were bright red and usually came with a big blue handle and big yellow speaker on top that looked like the sun.
    Another memorable model was playskool and fisher-price. Those were usually a white body and then had a red cassette deck faceplate and all the big buttons on top were in primary colors. They also had the big plastic handle built-in.
    It was popular for these kids cassette players to have attached mics🎤 that were on those coiled wires like an old landline phone. I think this was called the "sing-along" feature because your voice would be amplified to play out of the speaker when you used the mic.
    IP branded personal cassette players were also popular. I had a little mermaid one.
    I feel like the chunky yellow walkmans that had the word "sports" on the front were pretty popular.

  • @TheOneFreakservo
    @TheOneFreakservo Рік тому +9

    'Walkman', 'Discman'....Something tells me if Apple didn't invent the iPod, the next portable music device - because of the usage of hard-drive storage - would have been called 'Hardmans'. And Capcom would sue.

    • @6581punk
      @6581punk Рік тому

      There were players before the iPod, they called them Portable Media Players or MP3 players.

  • @rikardekvall3433
    @rikardekvall3433 Рік тому

    Fun review! I bought the original TPS-L2 in 1983 and still have it. In original box, carrying bag and headset. Have had so many good hours with this in my youth. Loved it so much. All new LP were recorded to cassette and played and played. Expensive with batteries though.

  • @mickael486
    @mickael486 11 місяців тому +4

    Peter Quill was using his Mom's first walkman because he loved her. It's a creative and emotional plot device that you should appreciate.

  • @zenkid411
    @zenkid411 Рік тому

    Great stuff. I was born the year the first Walkman was released, so by the time I was old enough to listen to music, I went through a few cheap knockoffs as a kid in the late 80s, but my first serious walkman that I got in middle school was the Sony WM Fx41. This thing was so great, it had digital radio (i listened to a lot of it), which was getting common at the time, but a lot of my peers in high school used to have analog tuners on their walkmans as well. At some point around 1997 I remember people in school using extra tiny metal walkmans (sans radio usually), and that's when one of my friends inherited a TPS L2 from his uncle who was a dozen year older than us. I remember thinking that thing was huge, yet it seemed rock solid. 25 or 30 years later it's funny to see how the 80s and 90s have been reenacted because as you mention it, technology evolved quickly, yet culture focuses on some specific moments. Does that mean that when movies in the 2040s will represent the 2000s, everyone will use an original 2001 Ipod ? We'll see.

  • @carlhartwell7978
    @carlhartwell7978 Рік тому +3

    I'd happily pay £10 to see Matt cycling (£30 rollerskating in Lycra) with a tool belt and all of that attached, listening to The Power of Love or Cruel Summer!

  • @M101K3
    @M101K3 Рік тому

    Love it. The ending was perfectly tongue-in-cheek.

  • @damonappel
    @damonappel Рік тому +4

    An astute observation about the Walkman used in Guardians of the Galaxy. By 1989, the Discman was all the rage. I owned the original D5, and a friend had the slim D9, and the smaller-than-a-CD D88 was even released by that time. Chris Pratt's Peter Quill character would definitely have been the 'po boy loser, rocking that mammoth original Sony Walkman in 1989. 😅

    • @Troppa17
      @Troppa17 Рік тому

      In the movie it was an last gift from his mother along the mix tape if I'm not mistaken. So I think it was hers before and handed down. I see more an problem in the headphones then the player itself cause there were several Walkmans in that form factor and I think most kids hadn't seen a Sony in real life.

  • @scott-mercer
    @scott-mercer Рік тому +1

    Love your use of DAK catalog pages. That was essential reading back in the day. I bought a couple products from them, actually out of their warehouse, which was located in Canoga Park, Calif.

  • @reoproedros
    @reoproedros Рік тому +4

    do you know that i can not start my saturday jobs around the house routine without watching what techmoan has to show ?

  • @Jaxon1776
    @Jaxon1776 Рік тому

    I had a Walkman II in the early 80's as a kid. I loved it! I absolutely wore it out. I wish I still had one. Great memories.

  • @tenchuu007
    @tenchuu007 Рік тому +8

    But wait, was the battery life of each of the addons sixty hours? If not, you'd better pocket some more AAs.

    • @ricarleite
      @ricarleite Рік тому +3

      How did you comment on this two days ago if the video was added now? Patreon?

    • @WatanabeNoTsuna.
      @WatanabeNoTsuna. Рік тому +1

      ​​@@ricarleiteAlways... 😂 Yes, Patreon supporters get the videos days earlier.

  • @benji.B-side
    @benji.B-side Рік тому

    Great stuff and takes me down memories lane. I had a Sony Walkman TPS-L2 on which I listened to my Electro Tapes, (I'm an old school Break Dancer, there's videos of me dancing in the 80's, 90's and 2000's on my channel). I also listened to Depeche Mode, Human League, Heaven 17 and other stuff, especially on my paper round, headphones tucked nicely into my Parker coat hood in the cold. I still own the Sony SEQ-50 Graphic Equaliser, but I've lost the battery door. I still have hundreds of cassette tapes from those years. I always look forward to a Saturday morning upload from Techmoan. Great channel.

  • @WilliamHaisch
    @WilliamHaisch Рік тому +4

    I never had an authentic Sony. They were too premium! I only had basic generic $19 knockoffs. Mostly because I grew up on a farm and gravity was not be kind to these devices and trashing a Sony seemed like a damnable offense! 😂

  • @SatchPersaud-sm1gc
    @SatchPersaud-sm1gc Рік тому

    Omg so glad i refound this channel, long time veiwer, glad to be back

  • @docolemnsx
    @docolemnsx Рік тому +8

    I remember my mind being blown away 25 years ago, when I've learnt what Anti Roll is. Trouble is, I then started hearing the tape speed dropping slightly when I was walking in a hurry, despite that being what the mechanism was trying to prevent 😂 It got better when I got the newer model, which I remember being incredibly sturdy, surviving a bunch of drops and even whithstanding being forgotten next to a fire that melted my headphones and the tape inside the cassette inside the player, with only some esthetic damage on the outside 😅

  • @dhpbear2
    @dhpbear2 Рік тому

    5:45 - Hmm. I don't remember earbuds way back in 1988. The earphones I used were 'open-air' with the drivers facing *forward*! Not too great for airline flights. :(