Nothing beats the coolness of physical media being played back through transparent windows (or just the opening itself). Before I replaced my PC case, I had cut a window into my optical drive to see it in action. Still have an optical drive on current case but I do miss that opening... May as well mod this case at some point
I recall one of "The Spin Doctors " albums' had a spiral type artwork on the CD. during the last couple of tracks it would look especially cool at lower RPM resulting in a "minimally hypotonic cd spiral-graph " to view... I also remember Pearl Jams' CD arrwork was unique too.
It’s amazing how good the build quality was on 80s and early 90s gadgets like these. I have a Technics SL-XP6 that is from that era and to my mind was the best, it’s in as-new condition and works perfectly so I make sure I use it every 3 months or so in order to (hopefully) have the best chance of surviving longer. These days I feel gadgets are not made to last. When they stopped making CD portables from metal and instead used plastics they did get a lot cheaper and more accessible, but the quality was lost.
As with most things plastic, the quality suffers. I picked up an old Singer sewing machine from the early 50's in all metal. It works like new and its sturdy and strong and smooth to handle. I scored it for $40 including the sewing table that it comes in.
I've been watching your repair videos for a while. This video inspired me to finally get off my lazy duff and fix my long-laid up Betacam SP machine. Had a problem where the tape would get snagged while ejecting. Turned out to just need a dab of lighter fluid to free up a sticky tape guide. Now I'm finally back in action, recording music to it. Makes super quality analog recordings.
This type of CD players made a lot of sense when the MP3 format entered the market. I had a Philips EXP431 back in the day and it was really good, you could carry a decent amount of music with you (a bunch of minicds, the player and some rechargeable AAA fitted perfectly in a standard digital camera bag). The alternatives lacked capacity (pendrive mp3 players) or were very expensive (sd card based players)
I bought my Sony D50 in mid 1985 while stationed in Germany (then West Germany) and it is still completely functional. I also have the battery case that I bought along with it. As you are probably aware it operated on 5 "C" cells which as I recall would last well under two hours. For what it's worth the first CD I purchased was the newly released Dire Straits album Brothers in Arms.
I had a Sony Discman in 1990 and it was heavy, huge battery that didn’t last very long! I love Sony’s amazing innovations. Parts can add up for old devices!
Excellent choice of single: Utada Hikaru - Automatic. Fun fact: the album that single is from remains the highest selling in Japan (by millions over second place).
Always nice to see your quirky collection of CD players. I really enjoyed the innovation of the 90s where almost every idea made it to market. Now everything is focus tested and bland. At least until Flex phones take off.
Very eye soothing video. Never seen someone in US so complete in collecting all accessories for a single SONY product. Good job. Your j-pop CD surprised me !
my Sony D-EJ825 was the business. The anti skip was pretty impressive unless you were running with it. and although it used a separate power caddy, the headphone control switch located on the cord made it so convenient to control while it was in your backpack or pocket
6:43 Semisonic Feeling Strangely Fine...... Closing TIme, Every new beginning comes from some other beginnings end. One of my absolute favorite songs. Thanks again for the good video Colin!
I once had the Sony D-828 K car discman featuring anti-shock , mega-bass , dual illumination , remote and a plethora of other unique and useful features. I always have great memories of that discman.
I have it on my wireless headphones transmitter - good old analog infrared, use the headphone's circuit as a receiver for my better headphones to play games on headphones on the living room TV, let me tell ya that any rhythm game works flawlessly with those as they have downright zero delay from their analog nature (yeah, almost zero, of course they probably have theoretically some nanoseconds or what). The logo on the tall rounded 90's looking transmitter (which it in fact is, older than me may I add) really is a nice touch from the past, when Sony specially had the balls to try anything. And: ye they still worked flawlessly even if I got them 2nd hand... other than one old electrolytic cap. It's so much "built to last" that you can actually find a fully detailed service manual for it with all the circuit board traces laid down and the schematic, with full Bill of Materials. Then nowadays some manufacturers hide the service manuals as much as possible so you really can't repair it...
A lot of us that have had these players, or first time ever saw them will find your video very fascinating and appreciate the time you took to show us. Hopefully this very video will help pay for all the parts you’ve paid to make this happen. Keep them coming. Very enjoyable video. 👍🏻cheers!
The shot at 15:31 shows the exact thing you need to adjust to likely get the laser working properly: the small thing with a philips head is the trim pot for adjusting the laser.
I wish double-sided CDs didn’t come out so late in the CD’s lifespan. Double-sided mini cds would have definitely caught my attention and would probably curtail my first minidisc purchase. I can picture myself rocking mini-cd players throughout high school, especially if they eventually made mp3 compatible players.
Alpine had a gear problem in their cassette mechanism much like this Sony player and after breaking several gears i tried heating the post with my soldering iron and within seconds the gear started to loosen up and was easy to removed and lubricate. cheers.
Your videos are so motivating for those of us who create tech videos. You have lovely shots and great scripting / story telling. Always look forward to seeing your videos!
I'm usually someone super into more modern-looking tech, but there's something about that 90s Sony black-square-rugged-minimalist-whatever design that I just LOVE.
I used to have a D-88, and regularly used it as a portable CD player (for 5 inch discs) when I would walk to the video store. It was a great conversation piece, but sadly I moved on from it when I wanted a player with ESP and an FM radio.
I'm a walkman collector. I'm from and in India. I have most of the walkman models in my collection (400 walkman). The one CD player I have and absolutely love is the metal shiny red and so so mint Sony D 50. It still works though there's some dust in the display but I can't risk opening to clean!!
I had a top loading Sony Cassette CD recorder CFD-11 which struggled with reading CDs like shown in this video after a few years. Since I was a kid and had no clue what could cause the problem, I moved the lens forcefully left to right and back a few times, which helped in the beginning. Of course, this likely caused more damage at the end and the cd unit was completely broken soon after. I threw the player away a few years ago. Only now I learned what likely caused the issue thanks to this video.
Today I learned that Sony used the "CD Walkman" branding on a handful of players made before the year 2000, the year "Discman" officially became "CD Walkman". My CD Walkman D-NF430 from 2004. that I legitimately still use because I'm a total physical media guy and also because it's also a radio, isn't close to being as small as the units shown in this video but it's still pretty small, 137.8 x 137.8 x 31.1mm, and it's only 31.1mm thick because the housing for the single AA battery (and possibly also the AM antenna?) bulges out several millimetres from the rest of the body. It's still slender enough to easily fit in the lower pockets of any jacket I have.
13:07 I had the same player (on the right) back in the day. I used a cheap'ish set of Sennheiser headphones. I used that setup to fall asleep for a long time.
I bought that little CD player too. :) Loved it. It was back when 3" CDs were trying to be a thing... Of course, that didn't last long... but this worked fine... just make sure not to touch the disc
Good stuff. I actually got into mini CD-Rs back in the day, for audio, VCD and MP3. The MP3 option was most useful but I also used the VCD format for 24 minute TV episodes.
Many of the laser mechanics only had one laser to control the ability for the laser to read correctly. Then they came out with the separate control to keep it in check and playing then they added the buffer feature for skipping to all players as was advertised??? I have used these players at one time and in store displays . I think Sears advertised one. Memories. Showing the build quality on the second player was really fascinating to see. It almost look like it was built today with obvious limitations. Amazing to see how far we have come and to see the cd is still hear and Note The DVD format spun into Bluray and now 4k.I know Im very Punny🤣
I found a Sony d303 at thrift store in very clean shape.. works well.. I’m am intrigued by the quality and the technology for the time I understand why they are collectible I am happy to have found a rare valuable one
I love how you mix up the hands-on repair with perspectives on the tech and Sonys reputation to miniaturize component at the time. Also, the macro shots are amazing - thanks for a great video.
Thank you! I’ve learned that while I find the historical/social context of retro tech to be interesting, some people just want to see the hardware. I’ve been trying to find the right balance between the two.
Sony still makes miniature electronics even if it does not look tiny. Their Ultra HD BlueRay players like Sony UBP-X700 (or UBP-X800), so on, have very compact PCBs with tiny components, so that contemporary computer PCBs may appear bulky aged findings of electronics archeologists.
I've always wondered if they tried to put music on a Blu-ray disc could they use the GameCube size disc allowing for smaller portable without sacrificing number of tracks or fidelity? With DVD you might have to ask the question but with Blu-ray I'm one-hundred-percent betting yes
TDNC : "But the biggest improvement was advertised right on it's translucent lid." Me : Extra Sensory Perception??? TDNC : "ESP or Electronic Shock Protection" Me : Oh, that makes more sense.
I actually have the Sony D-EJ985, which is CRAZY small! It's only mm larger than an cd and just a few mm thick too. It had the display on the headphonechord! Still works!
Managed to pick up the Crown CD-10 yesterday.There are a few differences between the CD-10 and the D-88.The D-88 power supply does not work in the CD-10.The CD-10 only has a power jack on the slip on battery pack and not on the player.The CD-10 has a line out where the remote jack is on the D-88.The obvious lcd display down the bottom of the CD-10.Both sound amazing.
I had a D82 back on the days. I got it new from one of the big Electric Centers in Germany. Ridiculous cheap (around 50DM) because nobody bought a device where you could bot get media for. I had hunted 10 mini CD singles with only 2 songs each A and B sides. But a nice piece of tech - passed the way for the Minidisc.
A slightly later 3 inch cd player was the Philips Pocket Expanium EXP 401 Personal Portable Mini MP3 CD Player (EXP401/17). It was sold as a compeditor to MP3 players using a Burn-Your-Own MP3 CD philosophy. Using MP3 files you could fit an entire album on the smaller disks. Not as quality looking as the Sony's, but it plays MP3 files as well as CD singles. A few are listed on EBay.
I discovered Philips released at least five models of these Mini MP3 CD players in the early 2000's: EXP 103 (in 2000), EXP 201 (2001), EXP 401 (2002), EXP 411 (2002) and EXP 431 (2003). I have a 431 but the 103 is the most retro looking. Build quality is nowhere near the early Sony players so getting a working unit may be difficult.
I owned a D-88 back in the day. I was so excited to get it, but it just wasn't portable at all. You had to put it down on a desk/table in order to play it because 1. it was dangerous to carry while playing, and 2. it had NO buffer to prevent song skipping. I ended up returning it, although I do wish I still owned it today for the nostalgia. I also owned the original Sony portable CD player from 1984. Man was that thing cool back then!
I loved this episode. I personally would like to own some of my audio devices I grow up using. Specifically an Aiwa casette player with radio, a cheap common CD player from Sony which reads mp3 and an MZ R55 mini disc player. I wish I can find these.
Philips had a MP3 player that used mini CDs instead of flash memory. They were sold in the early 2000s, 2003, 2004 to be more precise. I used to work there and almost bought one.
We had a dollar store here in the States back in the late 90's that had a big selection of CD-3 music discs. They were blowing them out at 2 for a dollar, so I bought one of each. Fats Domino, The Vogues, and several other artists were on these discs. Only a few songs per disc, but very cool. My Technics drawer loading CD player has a position in the drawer that will accept the 3 inch discs. Audio Magazine, long gone (sadly) offered a 3 inch CD as a promo thing. I forget what was on it, but just one more added to my collection.
I wouldn’t mind getting one of these D88 portable cd players one day in the future. It wouldn’t be my daily cd player for obvious reasons but I’d defiantly use it for fun on weekends and see if it catches people’s attention when I start playing my cds in places like Starbucks restaurants and during outings with friends. It looks unique and fun to use.
I mean, I know americans don't mean what they're saying when they say "How is it going?" but I have never heard someone say it with less empathy than this dude.
Not sure why the UA-cam algorithm brought this to my attention, but I'm glad it did! I happen to have a Crown CD-10 that was passed down from my sister and now I understand why it would half-heartedly spin the discs but never quite read them. I never thought about repairing it but it's good to know it may be possible.
A good friend of mine had one of these players in the late 80’s; it was awkward to use as a portable…….. I still have my D5 portable with the carrying case that fit 6 C batteries (!!).
One major characteristic of the D80 that you forgot to mention: it's all-plastic; the solidity of the previous metal designs is clearly missing, as well as the sober sophistication that made Sony the king of cool tech in the 80s. In pursuit of lower price tiers, Sony went from an all-metal design in the D88, to a plastic & metal D82, to an all-plastic D80, losing along the way what made Sony-branded gadgets desirable. By the late 90s there was nothing special about Sony portable tech.
I have a Philips EXP411 mini CD player. Dates from late 90s. I travelled a lot for work and I used it because it could play mp3. I think that gave about 150-200 songs on each disc. Now I’ll have to see if it still works.
Every product that came out from Japan bubble era was high tech, high quality and well built. I miss those days.
what do you mean bubble era?
curious
@@coolelectronics1759 1986-1991 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_asset_price_bubble
You forget the price… high price. lol
Yes, but this particular one was a pretty stupid concept, you have to admit that.
"high quality and well built", 3 out of 3 aren't working. Sure.
Always enjoy the care you put into the extreme close-up shots. This video really exemplifies it; thank you!
LGR : Little laptop
TDNC : Little diskmans
Me : Huge fun
I just watched that! Glad I scrolled down to avoid a redundant comment, I will find other ways to waste 1's and 0's on googles servers.
@@nigel-Rollercam-channel Oh man, I'm gonna start using that last sentence as an insult!
@@estebanvasquez2307 Oh, Please do, I rarely get quoted🧐
Dankpods: GIANT NUGGET
Diskmans? Discmen?
I bought a Sony Discman D-22 with Mega Bass back in 1990 for a holiday from the UK to Australia. I still have it and is works perfectly
Yes, glad I could make a small contribution to this video! Hope to see you fix these three beauties in the future.
"...connecting with the past."
[Cut to a close-up of "Power of Love" by Huey Lewis and the News]
This is heavy.
Also, some CD's art while spinning is quite fun to look at
Nothing beats the coolness of physical media being played back through transparent windows (or just the opening itself).
Before I replaced my PC case, I had cut a window into my optical drive to see it in action. Still have an optical drive on current case but I do miss that opening... May as well mod this case at some point
I recall one of "The Spin Doctors " albums' had a spiral type artwork on the CD. during the last couple of tracks it would look especially cool at lower RPM resulting in a "minimally hypotonic cd spiral-graph " to view...
I also remember Pearl Jams' CD arrwork was unique too.
I used to keep the lid on my PS1 open and push the little thingy to keep the CD spinning.
apart from spiral cd art are there any cds that have pictures only visible when spinning ?
It’s amazing how good the build quality was on 80s and early 90s gadgets like these. I have a Technics SL-XP6 that is from that era and to my mind was the best, it’s in as-new condition and works perfectly so I make sure I use it every 3 months or so in order to (hopefully) have the best chance of surviving longer. These days I feel gadgets are not made to last. When they stopped making CD portables from metal and instead used plastics they did get a lot cheaper and more accessible, but the quality was lost.
As with most things plastic, the quality suffers. I picked up an old Singer sewing machine from the early 50's in all metal. It works like new and its sturdy and strong and smooth to handle. I scored it for $40 including the sewing table that it comes in.
Your content continues to blow me away. You’re a talent and this platform is lucky to have you!
I've been watching your repair videos for a while.
This video inspired me to finally get off my lazy duff and fix my long-laid up Betacam SP machine. Had a problem where the tape would get snagged while ejecting. Turned out to just need a dab of lighter fluid to free up a sticky tape guide. Now I'm finally back in action, recording music to it. Makes super quality analog recordings.
why a dab of lighter fluid isn't that flammable?
Techmoan has an excellent video on this as well that came out 5 years or so ago.
I can't look at old electronics without thinking, "the belts have perished" anymore
@@Arbiter099 haha
@@Arbiter099 Also "No I won't replace the caps even tho I know that could help before any of you type in the comments section"
6:45 Sounds like it's ecstatically roaring out of happiness to be able to finally read something!!!
Some how seeing you have an Utada cd makes me smile. Probably because my wife is a fan of her music.
This type of CD players made a lot of sense when the MP3 format entered the market. I had a Philips EXP431 back in the day and it was really good, you could carry a decent amount of music with you (a bunch of minicds, the player and some rechargeable AAA fitted perfectly in a standard digital camera bag). The alternatives lacked capacity (pendrive mp3 players) or were very expensive (sd card based players)
0:17 you made it sound like they did a walkman + CD together
I bought my Sony D50 in mid 1985 while stationed in Germany (then West Germany) and it is still completely functional. I also have the battery case that I bought along with it. As you are probably aware it operated on 5 "C" cells which as I recall would last well under two hours. For what it's worth the first CD I purchased was the newly released Dire Straits album Brothers in Arms.
I had a Sony Discman in 1990 and it was heavy, huge battery that didn’t last very long! I love Sony’s amazing innovations. Parts can add up for old devices!
I would totally use the D88 to play CDs in my house, just to see the full-size discs sticking out the sides of it and spinning. :D
Excellent choice of single: Utada Hikaru - Automatic.
Fun fact: the album that single is from remains the highest selling in Japan (by millions over second place).
Always nice to see your quirky collection of CD players. I really enjoyed the innovation of the 90s where almost every idea made it to market. Now everything is focus tested and bland. At least until Flex phones take off.
so true!
Very eye soothing video. Never seen someone in US so complete in collecting all accessories for a single SONY product. Good job. Your j-pop CD surprised me !
17:20 "It can illustrate..." the stubbornness of the Japanese
love these these kind of videos thank you for providing these, a relic of my youth.
Wasn’t expecting a second, let alone third CD player. The video kept going and going lol.
I mean they were right there in the thumbnail though lol
I love your camera angles. Your videos are like visual ASMR. Amazing as always. :)
my Sony D-EJ825 was the business. The anti skip was pretty impressive unless you were running with it. and although it used a separate power caddy, the headphone control switch located on the cord made it so convenient to control while it was in your backpack or pocket
6:43 Semisonic Feeling Strangely Fine...... Closing TIme, Every new beginning comes from some other beginnings end. One of my absolute favorite songs. Thanks again for the good video Colin!
Man to think that when my grandpa died my uncles wanted to toss to the trash his discman, I'm so glad that I recover it model D-171 in mint condition
I once had the Sony D-828 K car discman featuring anti-shock , mega-bass , dual illumination , remote and a plethora of other unique and useful features. I always have great memories of that discman.
I really miss the old Sony logo that looked like an S made up of dots, it almost looks like braille.
I have it on my wireless headphones transmitter - good old analog infrared, use the headphone's circuit as a receiver for my better headphones to play games on headphones on the living room TV, let me tell ya that any rhythm game works flawlessly with those as they have downright zero delay from their analog nature (yeah, almost zero, of course they probably have theoretically some nanoseconds or what).
The logo on the tall rounded 90's looking transmitter (which it in fact is, older than me may I add) really is a nice touch from the past, when Sony specially had the balls to try anything. And: ye they still worked flawlessly even if I got them 2nd hand... other than one old electrolytic cap.
It's so much "built to last" that you can actually find a fully detailed service manual for it with all the circuit board traces laid down and the schematic, with full Bill of Materials. Then nowadays some manufacturers hide the service manuals as much as possible so you really can't repair it...
That's how you know It's a Sony
so cool! I am visually impaired I wonder if you can feel it?
or was it printed on and kinda like what IBM does with there logo?
Good taste on Music!
Utada Hikaru's 1st single"Automatic/time will tell"
Janet's "When I Think of You"
And The Jets" Crush on You"
A lot of us that have had these players, or first time ever saw them will find your video very fascinating and appreciate the time you took to show us. Hopefully this very video will help pay for all the parts you’ve paid to make this happen. Keep them coming. Very enjoyable video. 👍🏻cheers!
I remember the mini-CD. The cost was just insane compared to the price of a full CD.
Utad Hikaru!!! I was really into that girl in the early 2ks, awesome!
12:30 ... Only an instrumental version? No, no, that was a Karaoke version, very important in Japan, where karaoke is so popular!
Thank you for posting the links to those problematic gears. With that I was able to get the parts to fix my own D-88. Such a great help.
The shot at 15:31 shows the exact thing you need to adjust to likely get the laser working properly: the small thing with a philips head is the trim pot for adjusting the laser.
I wish double-sided CDs didn’t come out so late in the CD’s lifespan. Double-sided mini cds would have definitely caught my attention and would probably curtail my first minidisc purchase. I can picture myself rocking mini-cd players throughout high school, especially if they eventually made mp3 compatible players.
Never heard of double sided cds. I know double sided DVDs.
They did make MP3 compatible minidisks i used to use them all the time I still have my minidisk player with some minidisks
Alpine had a gear problem in their cassette mechanism much like this Sony player and after breaking several gears i tried heating the post with my soldering iron and within seconds the gear started to loosen up and was easy to removed and lubricate. cheers.
Your videos are so motivating for those of us who create tech videos. You have lovely shots and great scripting / story telling. Always look forward to seeing your videos!
That "Utada Hikaru" CD WOW! I Love Utadas Songs
I'm usually someone super into more modern-looking tech, but there's something about that 90s Sony black-square-rugged-minimalist-whatever design that I just LOVE.
I always think its so cool that you can play a 2021 brand new cd on some old wood grain CD player from the early 80s!
I used to have a D-88, and regularly used it as a portable CD player (for 5 inch discs) when I would walk to the video store. It was a great conversation piece, but sadly I moved on from it when I wanted a player with ESP and an FM radio.
Really love your videos. A great form of informative nostalgia (at least for me). Thanks for making them!
I'm a walkman collector. I'm from and in India. I have most of the walkman models in my collection (400 walkman). The one CD player I have and absolutely love is the metal shiny red and so so mint Sony D 50. It still works though there's some dust in the display but I can't risk opening to clean!!
Fantastic video Colin. Exactly what I was looking for today!
And this was done in 1988... Amazing stuff. Great video! 👍👍
I bought this as in impulse at my local Wherehouse new in 88. I used this almost everyday until it died in the early 2000s.
Respect. 10/10 creators won't admit they couldn't fix something these days. Proud of u
I had a top loading Sony Cassette CD recorder CFD-11 which struggled with reading CDs like shown in this video after a few years. Since I was a kid and had no clue what could cause the problem, I moved the lens forcefully left to right and back a few times, which helped in the beginning. Of course, this likely caused more damage at the end and the cd unit was completely broken soon after. I threw the player away a few years ago.
Only now I learned what likely caused the issue thanks to this video.
Today I learned that Sony used the "CD Walkman" branding on a handful of players made before the year 2000, the year "Discman" officially became "CD Walkman".
My CD Walkman D-NF430 from 2004. that I legitimately still use because I'm a total physical media guy and also because it's also a radio, isn't close to being as small as the units shown in this video but it's still pretty small, 137.8 x 137.8 x 31.1mm, and it's only 31.1mm thick because the housing for the single AA battery (and possibly also the AM antenna?) bulges out several millimetres from the rest of the body. It's still slender enough to easily fit in the lower pockets of any jacket I have.
I had a D5 I purchased in Akihabara, Tokyo in 1985. In fact it may be in a box in storage…
It was magic at the time.
I had this Mini-Crown-Player back in the days. Never thought that it will become so value.
I had one of the first Discman with a card size remote control. It sounded great and never failed to read a disc.
UA-cam recommended this channel for me ..... and i liked it awesome
THANK YOU! I just removed cleaned and lubed that same gear on my D15 and it finally works!
Damn... That type of mechanism is also found in the Sony CD-RW units. I just thrown one identical a month ago...
i found your channel during Lock down and have been hooked ever since thanks for the great vids!
Seeing standard size cd played on mini CD player....mind blown.
13:07 I had the same player (on the right) back in the day. I used a cheap'ish set of Sennheiser headphones. I used that setup to fall asleep for a long time.
I bought that little CD player too. :) Loved it. It was back when 3" CDs were trying to be a thing... Of course, that didn't last long... but this worked fine... just make sure not to touch the disc
That smaller than tape and smaller than 💿 sony products 🤔 are feats of engineering!
Good stuff.
I actually got into mini CD-Rs back in the day, for audio, VCD and MP3. The MP3 option was most useful but I also used the VCD format for 24 minute TV episodes.
Many of the laser mechanics only had one laser to control the ability for the laser to read correctly. Then they came out with the separate control to keep it in check and playing then they added the buffer feature for skipping to all players as was advertised??? I have used these players at one time and in store displays . I think Sears advertised one. Memories. Showing the build quality on the second player was really fascinating to see. It almost look like it was built today with obvious limitations.
Amazing to see how far we have come and to see the cd is still hear and Note The DVD format spun into Bluray and now 4k.I know Im very Punny🤣
Love 3 inch cds. The music is the most important thing.
Such Nostalgia, I loved the 80's and the 90's.
宇多田光第一张专辑我买过两次卡带,后来还买了一张正版cd收藏。当年引进版磁带是美卡音像出的,质量其实是不错的。
I found a Sony d303 at thrift store in very clean shape.. works well.. I’m am intrigued by the quality and the technology for the time
I understand why they are collectible I am happy to have found a rare valuable one
I don't know how to fix anything, but for some reason these kinds of videos are fascinating.
Seeing the Utada Hikaru's 'Automatic' single disc really takes me back to the better days...
I love how you mix up the hands-on repair with perspectives on the tech and Sonys reputation to miniaturize component at the time. Also, the macro shots are amazing - thanks for a great video.
Thank you! I’ve learned that while I find the historical/social context of retro tech to be interesting, some people just want to see the hardware. I’ve been trying to find the right balance between the two.
Sony still makes miniature electronics even if it does not look tiny. Their Ultra HD BlueRay players like Sony UBP-X700 (or UBP-X800), so on, have very compact PCBs with tiny components, so that contemporary computer PCBs may appear bulky aged findings of electronics archeologists.
I've always wondered if they tried to put music on a Blu-ray disc could they use the GameCube size disc allowing for smaller portable without sacrificing number of tracks or fidelity? With DVD you might have to ask the question but with Blu-ray I'm one-hundred-percent betting yes
TDNC : "But the biggest improvement was advertised right on it's translucent lid."
Me : Extra Sensory Perception???
TDNC : "ESP or Electronic Shock Protection"
Me : Oh, that makes more sense.
The Art of playing with old gadgets love it dude. 👌
I still have the sony discman dnf 401. Incredible sound!! Looks new!!!🥰🥰🥰🥰
The display need the conducting rubber strip to be replaced, the rubber can be found in almost all old lcd watches. Quite easy task.
My MiniDisc Was *TheBomb* Back in The *Napster* Days.
(Took All Night to DownLoad 3 Songs on a 28.8 Kbps Modem)
I actually have the Sony D-EJ985, which is CRAZY small! It's only mm larger than an cd and just a few mm thick too. It had the display on the headphonechord! Still works!
Managed to pick up the Crown CD-10 yesterday.There are a few differences between the CD-10 and the D-88.The D-88 power supply does not work in the CD-10.The CD-10 only has a power jack on the slip on battery pack and not on the player.The CD-10 has a line out where the remote jack is on the D-88.The obvious lcd display down the bottom of the CD-10.Both sound amazing.
I had a D82 back on the days. I got it new from one of the big Electric Centers in Germany. Ridiculous cheap (around 50DM) because nobody bought a device where you could bot get media for. I had hunted 10 mini CD singles with only 2 songs each A and B sides. But a nice piece of tech - passed the way for the Minidisc.
A slightly later 3 inch cd player was the Philips Pocket Expanium EXP 401 Personal Portable Mini MP3 CD Player (EXP401/17). It was sold as a compeditor to MP3 players using a Burn-Your-Own MP3 CD philosophy. Using MP3 files you could fit an entire album on the smaller disks. Not as quality looking as the Sony's, but it plays MP3 files as well as CD singles. A few are listed on EBay.
I discovered Philips released at least five models of these Mini MP3 CD players in the early 2000's: EXP 103 (in 2000), EXP 201 (2001), EXP 401 (2002), EXP 411 (2002) and EXP 431 (2003). I have a 431 but the 103 is the most retro looking. Build quality is nowhere near the early Sony players so getting a working unit may be difficult.
I owned a D-88 back in the day. I was so excited to get it, but it just wasn't portable at all. You had to put it down on a desk/table in order to play it because 1. it was dangerous to carry while playing, and 2. it had NO buffer to prevent song skipping. I ended up returning it, although I do wish I still owned it today for the nostalgia. I also owned the original Sony portable CD player from 1984. Man was that thing cool back then!
CD burner was able to write these smaller CD's too, so i kept the player, loved them
Thanks for the video. I have a D50 which my dad bought in 1985 or 1986. It still works fine.
I loved this episode.
I personally would like to own some of my audio devices I grow up using. Specifically an Aiwa casette player with radio, a cheap common CD player from Sony which reads mp3 and an MZ R55 mini disc player. I wish I can find these.
Just a heads up that I can provide Delorean B-roll if you ever need some pizazz to add to "blast from the past" dialogue ;)
Philips had a MP3 player that used mini CDs instead of flash memory. They were sold in the early 2000s, 2003, 2004 to be more precise. I used to work there and almost bought one.
We had a dollar store here in the States back in the late 90's that had a big selection of CD-3 music discs. They were blowing them out at 2 for a dollar, so I bought one of each. Fats Domino, The Vogues, and several other artists were on these discs. Only a few songs per disc, but very cool. My Technics drawer loading CD player has a position in the drawer that will accept the 3 inch discs. Audio Magazine, long gone (sadly) offered a 3 inch CD as a promo thing. I forget what was on it, but just one more added to my collection.
Love it, thanks! I do enjoy your teardowns that are brief enough to get to the point.
Sony’s electronics have been very cool for a long time.
I wouldn’t mind getting one of these D88 portable cd players one day in the future. It wouldn’t be my daily cd player for obvious reasons but I’d defiantly use it for fun on weekends and see if it catches people’s attention when I start playing my cds in places like Starbucks restaurants and during outings with friends. It looks unique and fun to use.
I mean, I know americans don't mean what they're saying when they say "How is it going?" but I have never heard someone say it with less empathy than this dude.
Not sure why the UA-cam algorithm brought this to my attention, but I'm glad it did! I happen to have a Crown CD-10 that was passed down from my sister and now I understand why it would half-heartedly spin the discs but never quite read them. I never thought about repairing it but it's good to know it may be possible.
That’s awesome. Looking forward to seeing the video of the display repair down the line.
Man i love the 80 s portable music players
i still use them today!
A good friend of mine had one of these players in the late 80’s; it was awkward to use as a portable…….. I still have my D5 portable with the carrying case that fit 6 C batteries (!!).
One major characteristic of the D80 that you forgot to mention: it's all-plastic; the solidity of the previous metal designs is clearly missing, as well as the sober sophistication that made Sony the king of cool tech in the 80s. In pursuit of lower price tiers, Sony went from an all-metal design in the D88, to a plastic & metal D82, to an all-plastic D80, losing along the way what made Sony-branded gadgets desirable. By the late 90s there was nothing special about Sony portable tech.
I did buy one of those discman from Japan!
I have a Philips EXP411 mini CD player. Dates from late 90s. I travelled a lot for work and I used it because it could play mp3. I think that gave about 150-200 songs on each disc. Now I’ll have to see if it still works.