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Unusual Olympus
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Last edited by andy; 12-05-2021 at 08:31 PM. |
#2
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I remember when this style of headphone sets became popular when I was in middle school... although I don't recall a micro cassette model. My first "walkman" style set was a Panasonic and had a very impressive sound. I have no idea what became of it thru the years. It's possible that I might find it if I were to dig around deep enough.
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Charlie Trahan He who dies with the most toys still dies. |
#3
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I had the dictation machine equivalent - SW77. No radio, but it did have a built in stereo mike and also had two speed, and metal tape option. Mine eventually failed due to over-use of the cue/review when transcribing minutes. I possibly could mail you an unused metal tape micro-cassette (you can send email from this forum) - the frequency response wasn't that great so I didn't use it for music afte a few goes and the metal tape were 22.5mins each side (MC45 I think). I have one or two metal tape microcassettes with speach that I might like to copy if I ever find out what is one them, so let me know if you ever decide to put it on Ebay. Regards Alan aka london-ab |
#4
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Micro Cassettes
I still use a JVC D-M3 stereo microcassette deck with my stereo system.Also have a JVC MQ-5K handheld micro recorder just acquired from Germany.Have an Olympus SW-77 which served me well in the 1980s recording at concerts. Sony made an MC-1,I think it was.Small plastic cased deck for home use powered by D cells.Sony also made a very slim micro recorder which had an FM tuner shaped like a microcassette which fitted instead of a microcassette. They also made a "chunky" handheld unit with builtin AM & FM tuner.Sharp made a very heavy HiFi deck.
Metal tapes made by TDK,Memorex,Olympus,Sanyo,Sony among others. New here.How do I insert a picture? |
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