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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: October 23rd, 2023

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  • I think it’s the wrong question. The endgame is an illusion. The perfect system doesn’t exist, nor will it ever. Every single setup has strengths and weaknesses, but that’s kind of what makes the whole hobby fun.

    I don’t do this as much anymore, but I loved my system, but always got antsy after a while for something new, something “better” in some way. I’d own it for a while, maybe years and years, then something else would catch my attention.

    And my budget changed, so I could afford more expensive equipment, if I wanted it (within reason and what I could get my wife to agree on).

    Paul McGowan at PS Audio had a good take on this:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uytj1MvZMDQ



  • Trumpet1956@alien.topOPBtoVintage AudioRadio Shack catalogs
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    10 months ago

    Ah, so I double checked and it was the 1971 catalog that had 464 pages, not 1972. Also, you’re right, I didn’t count, just reacted to the dizzying array of stuff. But went back and looked and there were 33 turntables. But there were almost another 30 in consoles and all-in-one systems.






  • I had an Allied Radio Shack table top all in one setup. Had a turntable, cassette deck, amp and tuner. I don’t remember the model but it was from like 1970-72.

    It had a pair of Optimus speakers that were not terrible. Added a Teac 1230 reel to reel tape deck. It was a great setup for a 14 yr old kid.