I was 4 years old, listening to a record on headphones connected to this rig. Leaned too far back, and caught the 1/4 inch input jack on the headphones right in my fucking eyeball.
I was 4 years old, listening to a record on headphones connected to this rig. Leaned too far back, and caught the 1/4 inch input jack on the headphones right in my fucking eyeball.
I was given one of these by my brother when I was about 10yrs old, as he’d just bought some new fangled Pioneer with multi CD changer.
I had it for a few years before getting my own system with CD player… the innards were removed as they were failing, and I used it on it’s side to keep all my records in with my stereo on top.
That was the stack my dad had in the 80s! I can distinctively remember the dial layout on the amp, the feeling of the switches when they changed position on my fingers and the heft of the volume dial in the middle.
I don’t know what happened to them; i’m a little bit sad about that now.
Later on he built his own amp. He never had a formal education in electronics, but he taught himself quite a lot, including fixing TV’s with bad solder spots.
My dad had a 70’s twin tape deck stereo when I was a kid, it had balance sliders on it for recording tape to tape… which we found out was perfect for copying computer games that more modern stereos struggled with. It was a counter top system rather than a tower and probably at least close to 1m wide. I remember him replacing it at the end of the 80’s with some weird little stereo that could play both sides of an LP without turning it over.