I used to have this exact boombox. I bought it new in the summer of 1982 at Bradlees. I think I got it for $149 on sale from $169. It used to eat batteries so I asked for 6 D rechargeable batteries for my birthday and never had to buy batteries for it again. I had it all through college. Unfortunately I had it in the trunk of my car when I was rear ended at a stop light and the side of the case got broken into several pieces. I glued it back together and it wasn't pretty but it still worked. I had it until the summer of 1989 when the dial cord broke. I had to take the back off and manually tune it to my favorite station and leave it there. Shortly after that it got stolen.
The great thing about that era is that you didn't need to spend money on a good product. Even the low-end junk like Sanyo was still a well-built product that was designed to last forever!
Sanyo was ok. Fisher was decent enough as well. I had a Sanyo full rack system later and got a Hitachi CD deck for it, and it was a fine enough rack system. Got me through high school, college and beyond.
Got one of these beauties in '83 at my local flea market, tested it with the XDR cassette of Iron Maiden's Piece of Mind (what else), sounded great, took it home. This boombox was like my main music machine for a year or two, even added some extra bookshelf speakers to the ext. outputs and put it on a shelf in my bedroom, some Radio Shack Realistics, which to me sounded a bit better than the built-ins. The speakers in this thing were punchy but of course, lacked any real sub-bass. Some of the other boomboxes with detachables seemed to me to sound a bit better or fuller, maybe. Maybe they were higher output. It at least didn't sound tinny, due to those decent horn tweeters. I remember bringing it home and unpacking it from the big cardboard box and foam packing thing, it was such a thrill. Then by later 1984 I got myself a Sanyo full rack system and paid it off over a year. I still had this boombox in working condition but gave it to a friend of mine in the later 1990s and that was that. Still had some of my Pink Floyd stickers on the rear! We used to carry it 'round our LI NY nabe and I'd blast U2, Floyd, The Who, and Cars tapes all over the place. I recall my friend Erik and I also got a phone pickup mic and we did some ridiculous prank calls and stuff using the boombox. We called some stupid phone sex line and the girl in the precorded teaser was like "oh, baby, it's responding! (and you heard Erik and I on the tape commenting "yep, it's responding)". Was also good for recording WLIR FM radio concerts and bootlegs and stuff like that.
Very nice! These were considered a lower end, and that was only because of the cassette deck being basic. (No metal settings, and it was DC bias). But most played pre-recorded metal cassette tapes in them anyways. In those days. If it was loud, and sounded good. It was good enough.
Im wondering, is there a way to disable or cut the autostop function? Wondering cuz i have a bluetooth cassette tape and since its “fake tape” it autostops the tape sadly
I used to have this exact boombox. I bought it new in the summer of 1982 at Bradlees. I think I got it for $149 on sale from $169. It used to eat batteries so I asked for 6 D rechargeable batteries for my birthday and never had to buy batteries for it again. I had it all through college. Unfortunately I had it in the trunk of my car when I was rear ended at a stop light and the side of the case got broken into several pieces. I glued it back together and it wasn't pretty but it still worked. I had it until the summer of 1989 when the dial cord broke. I had to take the back off and manually tune it to my favorite station and leave it there. Shortly after that it got stolen.
Great radio I had when I was 15 ... I bought one to restore and it takes me back ... good sounding radio
That was amazing hearing Al Stewart on shortwave!
The great thing about that era is that you didn't need to spend money on a good product. Even the low-end junk like Sanyo was still a well-built product that was designed to last forever!
Sanyo was ok. Fisher was decent enough as well. I had a Sanyo full rack system later and got a Hitachi CD deck for it, and it was a fine enough rack system. Got me through high school, college and beyond.
The amount they want for some of these things on eBay! I’m glad I got my JVC RC-M70 for free back in 2006.
yes the tuner string was a big problem, i had to re-string it all the time
Exactly. I had this sanyo and from new i knew string was about to fail. And it did of course
Got one of these beauties in '83 at my local flea market, tested it with the XDR cassette of Iron Maiden's Piece of Mind (what else), sounded great, took it home. This boombox
was like my main music machine for a year or two, even added some extra bookshelf speakers to the ext. outputs and put it on a shelf
in my bedroom, some Radio Shack Realistics, which to me sounded
a bit better than the built-ins. The speakers in this thing were punchy but of course, lacked any real sub-bass. Some of the other boomboxes with detachables
seemed to me to sound a bit better or fuller, maybe. Maybe they were higher output. It at least didn't sound tinny, due to those decent horn tweeters. I remember
bringing it home and unpacking it from the big cardboard box and foam packing thing, it was such a thrill.
Then by later 1984 I got myself a Sanyo full rack system and paid it off over a year. I still had this boombox in working condition
but gave it to a friend of mine in the later 1990s and that was that. Still had some of my Pink Floyd stickers on the rear! We used to carry it 'round our LI NY nabe
and I'd blast U2, Floyd, The Who, and Cars tapes all over the place. I recall my friend Erik and I also got a phone pickup mic and we did some ridiculous prank calls
and stuff using the boombox. We called some stupid phone sex line and the girl in the precorded teaser was like "oh, baby, it's responding! (and you heard Erik and I
on the tape commenting "yep, it's responding)". Was also good for recording WLIR FM radio concerts and bootlegs and stuff like that.
The way the automatic music search works on those type players is the black spots in between the songs it searches for black spots
Is there any way you can connect an aux to this boombox? Ive tried with the mic input, but only works while recording, and its mute
Cool boombox. I wish you could get something nice like that today. ❤️📻
For whatever reason the soft eject doesn’t work on mine the tape door comes out super fast, any ideas on how to fix it ?
Very nice! These were considered a lower end, and that was only because of the cassette deck being basic. (No metal settings, and it was DC bias). But most played pre-recorded metal cassette tapes in them anyways. In those days. If it was loud, and sounded good. It was good enough.
You really only need the Cro2/Metal settings for recording. For playback, the Tone control is all you need to cut the high end down.
i miss that ol boom box ty for share
what kind of music is that, what song at the end of the movie? Because I like it a lot and I don't find shazam.
How did you get it apart? I'm stuck at the tuner know. Did it pop up and off?
Im wondering, is there a way to disable or cut the autostop function? Wondering cuz i have a bluetooth cassette tape and since its “fake tape” it autostops the tape sadly
есть.Надо снять лентопротяжный механизм,и снять пассик с маховика,идущии на кривошип автостопа.
Last year im found one abandoned in dump and the cue and rewiew is stuck same model and im refix it and working
Ses this video ua-cam.com/video/evP5Mmaz_Qk/v-deo.html at 18 minute 38 second were im found it is a good boombox
Showing update video on the ct100
There's not much to update, it's still here, nothing has changed. :-D
What batteries it takes?
"D" 6
@@homegrownsince93 6 батареек D.Этот аппарат спокойно работает от 12вольт.
Looks like a Panasonic model i got even if it's a Sanyo
Genesis Fading Lights
Why not just record your own music?