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As seen at a somewhat local "antiques mall".
The manufacturer of the player is "Paillard" and the record album on the platter is a 78 RPM called "Berceuse aux étoiles" (Cradle of the stars), on which is marked "85 cents in the US, 90 cents in Canada". That statement tells me that it was made in Québec, since a French recording would not have pricing such as that marked on it. No batteries, no headphones, just wind it up and play it. The chrome-plated tonearm is the sort that had the needle AND "speaker" built into it. Not really a speaker, just a part of the arm made specially to allow the vibrations picked up by the needle to be naturally amplified, the horn effect. You old-timers will, I am sure, excuse me talking about the basics and will also correct any errors I have made. Anyway, the record player is somewhat crude, but effective. Out in the canoe, a young man could serenade his passenger. Which, I am certain, will be the type of comments heard when someone in the future compares MP3 players to whatever is the then-current technology. |
#2
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![]() "Buck Frobisher" wrote in message ... As seen at a somewhat local "antiques mall". The manufacturer of the player is "Paillard" and the record album on the platter is a 78 RPM called "Berceuse aux étoiles" (Cradle of the stars), on which is marked "85 cents in the US, 90 cents in Canada". That statement tells me that it was made in Québec, since a French recording would not have pricing such as that marked on it. No batteries, no headphones, just wind it up and play it. The chrome-plated tonearm is the sort that had the needle AND "speaker" built into it. Not really a speaker, just a part of the arm made specially to allow the vibrations picked up by the needle to be naturally amplified, the horn effect. You old-timers will, I am sure, excuse me talking about the basics and will also correct any errors I have made. Anyway, the record player is somewhat crude, but effective. Out in the canoe, a young man could serenade his passenger. Which, I am certain, will be the type of comments heard when someone in the future compares MP3 players to whatever is the then-current technology. That "early MP3" player reminded me of something that I have not thought about in years. Back in 1955 when I was a kid...my dad bought me a cheapie 78 rpm record player that was made out of plastic and had a 115v motor... but basically not much different from the machine pictured. Just a tone arm with a small diaphragm in it. |
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