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You're viewing Page Seven of our Golden Age section of the
Boombox Museum. Click here to
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Arguably, the finest boombox ever made by Toshiba was the RT-S931. It offered
feature-touch cassette buttons, which detached to double as a wireless remote control.
Toshiba's music search system was called MQJS, or Music Quick Jump Song Selector.
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Martin sports his Sharp CF-5656 boombox at a Grandmaster Flash concert in Vienna,
Austria. There's no mistake that "old skool" rap has made a comeback. I will have
to find my fat-laced Pumas and Kongol in the attic. Hmm, Grandmaster Flash in Vienna
shouldn't be too surprising. Remember Falco making it big in the US?
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Another model in the Marantz "Gold Line," this is the PMS-3500. Like the 6000,
this one also has that home audio feel, and we can guess that tuner knob has a weighted
flywheel.
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Why is this little thing here? Well, the Aiwa CS-M1 is significant for a couple
of reasons. For one, it's the very first portable stereo to contain a micro-cassette
instead of a standard size one. Secondly, Aiwa marketed this model to women, thinking
the small shape and attractive look would make it a hit.
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This Sony CFS-D7 had an almost unheard of feature for its day--digital tuning! The
Sony product line was strong in the early '80s. Unlike most manufacturers' releases,
their models seemed to shrink as the '70s ended and the '80s endured. This one sold
for around $500 back in 1981.
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Why is this man smiling? Bill is the proud owner of several large, glitzy
ghettoblasters, including this Conion C-100F. But that's not the only reason
he's grinning: he sold a system just like this one for US$700! We're clearly in
a seller's market for boomboxes. We're only praying that sales gurus at
Sony, Panasonic, Aiwa and Sharp are viewing this site and thinking...
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In the US, these surface under the Conion line, in Canada they appear as
Clairtone. This Clairtone 7980 is an incredible piece in Chris' collection, who
resides in North Bay, Ontario. Here are the stats directly from the owner: a
three-way speaker system, SIX speakers. The woofers are 8", output power: 22.5 watts/channel.
Tuner is FM/AM/SW1/SW2, the FM tuner is excellent. the tuning knob has a flywheel weight!!
Cassette 1 is record/play and has programmable song search There is an LED-animated
tape travel display. Cassette 2 is play only and has auto-reverse. Thanks Chris!!
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I'd classify Mike Goode as a portable audio expert, as his collection is varied
and large, and includes this Pioneer SK-21. Says Mike, "I can also tell you that
the cassette boom-box initially appeared earlier than known here, I grew-up overseas
in the old Panama Canal Zone, my father worked for the US. Government then. Panama
due to the canal and commercialy strategic location was a re-distribution point
for literally hundreds of Japanese brands being distributed through a free-zone
to all of America, consequently, you could find a myriad of electronic products that
never made it to the US."
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