#1
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http://web.archive.org/web/200201060...1973_11_01.pdf
TRUE VINTAGE PRICING! (Not like today where they JACK UP THE PRICES cause they consider them SPECIALTY ITEMS now) Last edited by Dude111; 01-18-2023 at 09:46 AM. |
#2
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Yup, for example an IDE hard drive can easily cost more than a lower-capacity SATA drive. No more of that for me, I'm saving my external firewire drive that was bought for another purpose but never used in case another hard drive goes on me. The drive in the external enclosure is a SATA. Also, lots of soakers on eBought for memory cards of a low enough capacity to work with my old camera, but one seller has a crapload of NOS Kingston cards packaged with a card reader that I also needed for 8 bucks.
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#3
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Ah, the heydays of home stereo systems, when more than half the pages of that university newspaper were stereo ads.
__________________
Chris Quote from another forum: "(Antique TV collecting) always seemed to me to be a fringe hobby that only weirdos did." |
#4
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That was back when stuff was MADE WELL so the prices were not shocking really like they are now on garbage!!
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#5
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Those prices seem insanely high to me. Of course I have no idea what the exchange rate was in 1973. I didn't know any mid-fi stereo system back then cost anywhere near $1500. As far as well made....a matter of opinion. Most of that 70's japanese stuff was nothing to get excited about.
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Audiokarma |
#6
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Those prices are kinda awful for the early 70's. $1400 bought you a pretty decent car over at the Bowmac.
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#7
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Yes but the quality was mucho better!! (Prices more worth it)
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#8
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Yes, they where made to last!
I have the headphones from there. |
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