#1
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So I got a Sony
Hi,
I don't post here, much... but then I don't do much buying of audio equipment either.. Yesterday though I was off at a local goodwill looking for videogames when I found a radio that stood out from all of the other misc. stuff in the electronics section. I took it and plugged it in... turned it on.. got it tuned to a station and messed with the other controls.. it sounded really nice so I took it up and bought it along with my miscelaniouse video games and went home... I just thought I'd show it off. I'm happy. Anyway, it's a Sony TFM-9450W... I didn't have to clean it off at all when I got it home.. it was already really clean....rather unusual for something I just bought from a thrift store. Last edited by Rockin' Kat; 05-19-2006 at 04:33 AM. |
#2
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That's pretty clean! By the size of it, I'd guess it probably puts out a full-bodied sound for a table radio. Looks like it was made back when Sony was still a high-priced item.
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Charlie Trahan He who dies with the most toys still dies. |
#3
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Quote:
Your comment that your Sony sounded great and needed no cleanup reminds me of the day I received my Zenith K-731 AM/FM seven-tube table radio in the mail two years ago or so after winning an ebay auction for it. It came from Miami (I live 35 miles from Cleveland), 1200 miles or so, and had not even so much as one scratch on the walnut cabinet, only a couple of almost invisible blemishes near the speakers. When I plugged it in and turned it on, it took about 30 seconds to warm up and played beautifully after that. I didn't have to do a thing to it. Clean as a whistle, inside and out, and it sounds like a console as well. I still have the Zenith to this day (along with a C845 and four others) and it still works as well as the day I received it. These older radios were great in their day and still are; much better, IMHO, than most small transistor portables in stores today.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
#4
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A few days ago, I found a little Sony clock radio in the shape of a cube. It was at a yard sale near my cabin in the woods. The retro digital clock featured the mechanical flaps that fall down to make up the numbers. Definately a 70's characteristic! It, too, was clean, but I passed it up. I've got too much little stuff as it is.
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Charlie Trahan He who dies with the most toys still dies. |
#5
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my first radio was a sony icf5500w
am fm psb 1 hour timer pop up antenna base treble and a loudness contour switch built in earphone storage compartment scrolling tape tuning dial - with dial light nice radio I wish I still had mine |
Audiokarma |
#6
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Quote:
I had been wanting one for a while(a few years), but I kept finding clock after clock that just didn't work when I plugged them in at the thrift store. So when I found one that did I bought it. I just wish the switch wasn't so hard to use, it sticks and makes it a two handed job... one to hold the radio, and the second to force the switch to slide... that and one with a snooze function would have been nice... I know there were some like that.. I just never found one that worked. |
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