How did it all begin?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Mrs. Fatdog

Member (SA)
So as I [strike]look[/strike] trip over box after box that sweet FD 'rescues' (yes, he's told me that he rescues some so they will be loved again) :-/ I wonder how this all began....I know when we were dating, first married, and raising Lil Dog, we had narry a boombox, so it made me wonder where did they all come from?

I 'think' I know how Fat Dog started collecting them....he remembered a Conion that a friend from back in the day had and just started looking for it. Next thing you know....we host a website, make repro labels and are even featured in a book. :hmmm: Not sure how all this really happened, but let's move on....

:huh: How did you begin collecting old school boomboxes? :huh:

Are you reliving your teen angst from the 80's? Are you wishing you had an angst to relive? Do you just appreciate quality craftsmanship? Do you suffer from OCD and compulsively buy them....wait, I think that is hoarding? Did you have a man-crush on LL Cool J and love "I can't live without my Radio"?

:huh: What made you start collecting? :huh:

And secondary question....if you were a teen in the 80s that had an original box....do you still have it?
 
i grew up riding public busses through los angeles and seeing electronics boutiques covered from floor to ceiling in delicious boomboxes and i just remember wanting all of them and begging my mom to get me one, but to no avail, so as soon as i got older and got a job i started making up for my loss hahaha and now im an addict but i knew this was going to happen someday
 

blu_fuz

Well-Known Member
Staff member
I bought my BBX from the original owner almost 3 years ago. Though he had passed away, he did take care of his electronics because the house was full of them. :yes:

After he passed away his sister was supposed to sell everything off that was in the house. She had listed some snow blowers on craigslist and we made the 2hr trip to the house to check them out.

This was in the dead of winter on a super cold and windy day. We arrived and were given a flashlight and directed to the basement where the snowblowers lay in pieces. :-/ These hadn't been touched in years and were very old. I told her that they just weren't what we were looking for. I thought it was going to be a wasted trip because we were already on our way out after just a minute or two.

There was no electricity on in the house and no heat! As we are walking out with the flashlight I can see that there are about 6-8 more people walking around the house picking through things. I asked the lady what was going on and she informed us about her brother passing and that everything was for sale. She told us to walk around and if we found anything we wanted to just make an offer on it.

After walking through everything I saw the Dynasty HT-959 sitting in the middle of the upstairs living room. I remember thinking "that looks cool" and "there are some buttons missing". I wanted to plug it in, but like I said, no power and no heat were in the house. I picked it up and grabbed the power cord that was sitting next to it on the floor knowing I might buy it and it probably wouldn't work.

My wife says "what are you going to do with that?" I told her I didn't know but it was neat so I was going to see how much the lady wanted for it.

On the way back downstairs I saw a trickle charger for car batteries and I grabbed that too. There was a lot of cassette tapes, recievers, speakers, and just random electronics stacked everywhere up stairs. No other boomboxes that I remember, but again, I wasn't looking for any because I didn't know how awesome this find would turn out to be.

We made it downstairs, stopped by the lady, and told here we were ready to make a deal. Mind you, I really didn't want the boombox unless the price was CHEAP, more curious to see how much she wanted. I offered her $10 for both items and she counter offered at $15. :thumbsup:

Walked out with it giggling like a 10yr old school girl saying "what am I going to do with this thing?!" haha - Now a couple years later, I am here fixing it up instead of having it as a paper weight. If I only would have known then what I know now, there probably was a lot of other very rare or very valuable electronics in that house. Long gone now, but I saved a piece of history.
 

floyd

Boomus Fidelis
i had several boxes before i was 18

an m90
a sharp vz 2000
a lasonic trc 931
a lasonic trc 920
a magnavox d8443

by the time i was 30 years old i only had 1 box the m90 left .
the next thing you know my old man called me to say he wanted me to come look at and boombox he found at a yard sale ,so i go to my parents house which is only 25 minutes away from me and find that he had bought me this heavy ass 4 piece jvc ,the pc-11 to be exact , when i saw the box and picked it up i was very impressed with the weight and build quality of the jvc .

so now i had 2 jvc's and i was getting interested in finding some more boxes at yard sales and swap meets or wherever i could , and i did find a jvc rc 550 very cheap at a yard sale plus i got 5 more boxes at once at a swap meet :w00t: .


so now i'm here, a hundred or so boxes have passed through my hands and i still have about 30 boxes left .

one thing is for sure my days of spending big money on boomers is over ,i just can't justify it anymore . i got to be happy with what i have which is a lot :-D .
 

Mrs. Fatdog

Member (SA)
Good stories guys! Thanks for sharing.

:blush: Forgive the newbie post ... seems the mister has pointed out that this topics has been discussed and I should have searched the past threads :sad:
 

redbenjoe

I Am Legend
keep it going Mrs fatdog --- :thumbsup:
ignore that oh-so-snotty Mr fatdog :thumbsdown: :lol: :-)

its worth re-visiting this topic -
and - so far --all the replys were not posted in the original threads
-------------------------

my start was ever since cassettes were invented --
and then the ability to make PORTABLE recordings of any music off any station --outside -
at the beach , in a car , in the woods, up a tree --- anyplace // anytime :yes:

so -- perhaps the name ' boombox' was not yet used--
but any radio that had a recording deck --
was ' my first box '
:-)
 

ford93

Member (SA)
In my case it was one night when I was 19 yrs. old hanging out in a park near 103rd st. in Queens New York.

There was a guy jamming James Brown "Turn it Up Turn it Lose" on a JVC M-70. I immediately got hooked and started my crazy buying like an addict!

Until I bought the holy grail the JVC M-90 and that was the box that was the one and only. :yes:
 

hollyrockets

Member (SA)
Mrs. Fatdog said:
Good stories guys! Thanks for sharing.

:blush: Forgive the newbie post ... seems the mister has pointed out that this topics has been discussed and I should have searched the past threads :sad:

Yeah, whatever. Everyone likes to tell their stories again. Besides that... Is there ONE place where ALL the stories are???

:no: :no: :no:

I thought not.

I like it.

:yes: :yes: :yes:
 

Lasonic TRC-920

Moderator
Jr. High School, early 1980's is when my love affair began. But my love affair was with music. I couldn't get enough. As a young boy I'd listen to the am station's all night long until my mom would come in and turn the radio off.

Small radio's and small portable turn tables just didn't satisfy the urge for volume. It didn't take long for me to start wiring more speakers up to my turn table. On my 12th birthday I got Queen's "News Of The World" and Led Zeppelin's "In Through The Out Door". From that moment on....a life long quest for louder, heavier music began...

My first cassette mono player a Sanyo M2441L was louder than my turn table and was my first recorder to record songs off the radio. Songs like "Runnin' With The Devil" from Van Halen and "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" by AC/DC.

That's when the search for a player that would really give me what I wanted....MORE POWER & MORE VOLUME began! And the ability to share it with others to show them how completely AWESOME Heavy music was.

A few summer's later the local Radio Shack had the new Realistic SCR-8 in the window. It blew my mind with those massive LED's and high tech music search system. I saved and saved for it, but it was a trip to the Saugus Swap Meet were I bought, on a whim, my Lasonic TRC-920 that changed everything!

It had everything needed to RULE the streets and RULE I did ! ! !

I spent that summer not just listening to all of the greatest Hard Rock of the 1980's when it was brand new, I was studying it. Memorizing it. My Lasonic was with me day and night. It never left my side and if I didn't have batteries, I stayed home.

From there on, my search for Heavy and Faster music became and obsession. Van Halen, AC/DC, Black Sabbath, Anthrax, Slayer, Megadeth, Metallica....

As I grew up, my radio wore out. Much like many of the things that I had as a kid...it went in the trash.

But my obsession with music became a profession of music. 11 of my own album's later I still haven't been able to pull the musical needle out of my arm.

But it wasn't until a handful of years ago while talking with a friend about our days in high school that I remembered my old Blaster. For the life of me I could not remember the name of it, so I went to the internet and found the Pocket Calculator show and SAW for the first time in over 25 years MY RADIO! I recognized it right off. And then the search began to find one.

Once I got the 920, I started talking with others on S2G and then here and remembered all the dream radios I could never afford back in the day.

Now here in my 40's it appears nothing has changed....I still want it HEAVIER & LOUDER! And just like when I was a kid....I still want the Biggest Blaster on the Block!

AND NOW I HAVE THEM.... :rock: :chris920: :rock:
 

Gluecifer

Member (SA)
I thought I'd posted this already too, but apparently not according to the old threads.

My love affair began with the breakdancing/graffiti culture craze that came through in the erly 80s. I was about 10 at the time and fell in love with the concept of the ghettoblaster being the new and incredible new way to experience music. I was only a young kid though living in a coastal town in Australia and there was no 'scene' for this kind of thing at all. I did have a friend of the family in Melbourn who WAS a part of it. He was into graffiti, knew how to breakdance and had a damned big boombox. He was about 15 or so and was quite my role model. So he taught me how to moonwalk (to the complete astonishment of my primary school) and he recorded a lot of music for me on his radio. I wasn't old enough to have any kind of income to buy a big blaster, but I lusted after them in electrical store catalogues and in the stores themselves. I must say though that I NEVER saw a true ghettoblaster in a store at that age, my only memory of seeing true blasters was in the footage on tv and music videos that had them in there. I always thought back then that if it didn't have two antennas it wasn't a ghettoblaster, ahaha! But I was all about the LED meters, EQ's and of course the physical size and to my very limited retail experience at a local level I never saw these kind of radios for sale. Obviously I was heavily handicapped by my geographical location, as they were obviously sold en masse down here somewhere. But even if I found one I'd never be able to afford it as an 11 year old kid anyway.

When I hit 13 I was allowed to get my first job (working in a butcher's shop cleaning up) and for me the whole point of getting a job was to get a boombox. So I save for what seemed like eons and could finally afford a low rent threepiecer. It was very bare bones on features, and it was a no-name brand. Ironically I've never seen one posted in anyones collection or any other online photos, but I hope to one day find another. This radio (I believe the brand was TDJ, or TCJ, something like that) did me well through my early teenage years and was my most prized possession (after my Star Wars figure collection) but being a cheapy it wasn't up to the amount of use I subjected it too and eventually the deck began to fail and I started looking for another box. By this time I was working more at the butcher shop and had enough income to by a much higher quality box and after carefully browsing stores and catalogues I found a lovely Philips that became my goal to own. This was another threepiecer (I never saw any decent sized onepiecers in all those years looking) and it had gorgeous design, Dolby, 3 band equalizer and a superb LED meter, which was then always the hallmark of quality audio (to me anyway). Here's the only pic I've ever found of it online:

grailphilips.jpg


I adored this box, played it day and night, recorded hundreds of songs of the radio, took it everywhere I went, played forever with detaching the speakers for optimal stereo separation, I even got my Dad to build a timber shelving unit for it that the main body could sit in with tape shelving underneath to make it look like a 'real' home stereo. My birthday after I bought the Philips I received a turntable for my main present, which opened up even more musical avenues for me. I began collecting 12inch singles and albums, I even bought a cheap Tandy/RadioShack mixer and attempted to cross fade and scratch with my turntable and another deck for the other source, which never seemed to work as well as I wished.

The Philips was my pride and joy for a few years and got throughly used one a daily basis. Unfortunately the record/pause had to be engaged for the line-in to work and due to me listening to and recording lots of vinyl it eventually broke and the deck became inoperable. My Dad tried to fix it to no avail, and that was that.
At this stage I was about 16 or so and bagan looking at buying home stereo gear and such, as most of us probably did and the idea of the boombox as my best friend faded. I was working more and I discovered thrash metal and death metal and became very active in that scene in my late teenage years. I did buy another cheap box in the early 90s though, a double deck mini that I used to record band rehearsals on and dub other bands demos and such. I did love that little radio, wish I still had her as she became covered in band stickers and was a well travelled little unit.

I'll skip forward about 8 years or and when I got my own place and began setting up a 'system' I bought a lot of nice hi fi equipment and built an expensive (for my income) system up. When this was complete I should have been happy, but listening to music on it just never 'gelled' for me, and I really wished I had a boombox again. This was about 1996 or so, and at that moment I decided I wanted another boombox and would try to get one, or possibly collect them. But I couldn't find a one anywhere, and other interests (...women) took my attention away from it and I gave up on having one again.

Then one day about 4 years ago I absolutely randomly searched for boombox on ebay and up came all these incredible listings of units I could but dream of as a kid. So I set about learning about them, found Stereo2Go, and educated myself on how to collect these lovely machines thanks to the shared knowledge from many people I didn't know then but who now count as friends. It was the community of collectors that taught me everything I knew, from seeing radios and working out what I liked to all the repairs and restoration. To this day I don't know how anyone could even try to collect boomboxes without having community resources like here.

That's my story, and I do apologise if I have posted this elsewhere before, I've feeling it's on here somewhere, and if not then on Stereo2Go possibly.

And if anyone's got one of those Philips Compo's please PM me if you want to move it on to a new home!!



Rock On.
 

Radio 80's FM

Member (SA)
Well when I was a kid my family was not well off. Not Oliver twist povo but not alot of spare cash for toys.
We used to make our fun ( something the kids of today wouldn't know how to do goddang it).
When we moved a mining town in the North West I used to ride my bike to the tip and bring back HEAPs of radios to repair and trade with my mates for other shiat. It was the early 80's and breakdance/rap etc was massive.
Alot of the other kids were well cashed up and had some cool Bbx's. I had my Junkers but nothing too flashy / big.
And then I spyed it in my mates garage. A BIG sharp. I dunno if it was a 777 (probably a 9797 or something). Well to cut a long story short, after a massive multiple party swapsie I had a LAND YACHT to swap for it!
Actually I think he pulled the fact that he wanted a LY but too bad cause now he had one and I had (his dad's) Sharp!!!!
As a footnote, when we moved back to the big smoke my mum left all my boxes up there fore my mates to have *sigh*
like most others my age, I recently decided to track down my old box. Well, that has now turned into another obsession!!
Lucky they are so cheap......
 

Cpl-Chronic

Member (SA)
I live in Canada so we had mostly SONY, ClairTone, JVC, Candle JIL, Magnasonic, etc. I had a CANDLE JTR1287 & I LOVED IT!!!! My buddy had a SONY CFS-500 & it sounded good too. I was 18 & free & blastin the beats. RUN DMC sounded pretty dope & LL's ode to his JVC was our anthem. by the time I was 21, I was into digital audio & home brewed multi-dirver designs. That was about 1990 on.
 

retrohead

Member (SA)
By the start of 1980 i was still only three and as the 1980s wore on i spent my infant life seeing people with these big portable music machines and it wasnt until 1985 or so i got my first real taste of a box up close one day while i was sat on the sea wall at bridlington,a young lady prolly about 16 at the time came and sat down near me and was blasting out "i got you babe"by ub40 on what i vaguely remember to be a giant silver three piecer.wether that event stuck in my subcontious or not but my subcontious finally became reality about 6 years ago when i got my first old school box-a hitachi trk 3d8e.since then of course ive had all the big hitters,including all the top m class jvc's,the big end gf sharps and others including the super jumbo.currently im sat on a gf9494,gf525,strange but sexy daewoo and an m80 so ive had my fair share of made up for the 80s time since!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.