After reading a post from Gmoney in another thread about his Lloyds stereo, I thought it might be fun to have a thread on the subject and photos if possible.
I am actually shocked that Google image search had my "Juliette Cassette Stereo"! Don't know if is a fluke or if most of you will find your's as well!
But first, I got this Mayfair portable reel to reel player when I was 11:
It was in the ballpark of $20 and that was before my paper route, so it must have been a birthday or Christmas present.
Of course it used the small (4"?) reels and recording quality sucked, but it was still a cool thing to be able to record from the radio (yes, using the crappy mic). It is as close as you could get to a cassette recorder before the cassette recorder existed. I think it probably used 4 ea. size C batteries! It actually had a matching green lid that clamshelled over the top to protect the tape!
This thing almost got me in trouble at school! I had spent the evening before breathing heavy into the mic (taught me about hyperventilation - had to pause the recording process frequently to let my head clear). This was when Dark Shadows was a big thing and they always had breathing going on in one of the old mansions (I forget what it meant-maybe simply that it was haunted). For some idiotic reason, in my 11 year old mind, I thought the bomb would be to put this hidden in the trash can playing back with the volume up (I sat in the back and the teachers would change classrooms at the bell, so we had about 5 unsupervised minutes between classes). My mom wuld have beat me if she knew I had wadded up ~15 sheets of clean notebook paper to bury the recorder! I left the first 2-3 minutes of the tape blank so it didn't start until after class got settled. The kids back in my corner started giggling a little after it began, and after a while the teacher took notice. At first she must have thought it was a passing thing, but after several minutes she decided to walk over to out area as she lectured to see what was going on back there. Oh crap, I knew she wouldn't make out the sound of breathing from the front of the class, but I had not considered that she might walk back there! I was watching her as close as I could without being conspicuous about it! I could tell that she was starting to pick up that there was a strange sound back there that didn't belong. and as she got closer to the trash, I knew I was going to have some 'splaining to do, but then, the tape miraculously ran out (does anyone know how long teh smaller tapes would play? I think this was at the 3-3/4 ips tape speed). She stayed back there a couple more minutes then returned to the front of the class.
Looking back, she could have later asked any of the kids what the commotion was and I would have been busted, but she didn't. Kids are weird - I guess it was just showing off!? But a portable recorder in 1969 was cool beans!
Three years later I had a paper route and bought my first audio system - a Juliette Stereo Cassette System for $69.99 from Key Wholesalers (a catalog merchandising store very similar to, but pre-dating (at least, in Augusta, GA) Service Merchandise)!
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The speakers that came with it were 6" one-ways. I believe the cabinet was sealed, but after about 6 months I removed the driver and filled the cabinet with rags from my mom's rag bag and was delighted that the sound actually improved quite substantially (my dad built Heathkit and I had watched him stuff padding around his speaker - looking back it is kind of weird that he didn't really get involved with my audio - he seemed to think it cool that I did what I did, but we did not share any of my development - I guess parents back then were more aloof - although he did get a 15' sailboat that we spent many, many weekends on - who knows!)! I can't remember how I had hooked up a turntable, but I figured out that by having the record button depressed and the pause button engaged I could play other sources through it (no source selector). The actuating arm molded under the record button broke and I figured out how to jam a little plastic Dairy Queen ice cream cone whistle into the mechanism to hold it in place (I was working at DQ by then), and this unit spent the next couple of years with the whistle permanently installed (I had figured out that the recorder was crap, but it worked okay as an "integrated amp"). My next purchase was a pair of KLH 6V speakers (mail order special for $58), and all of the sudden the sound quality blossomed! It actually sounded decent the KLH's.
I could go on with the rest of my system evolution involving a used HH Scott receiver, BSR 810 automatic turntable (worth a pic because of the unique changer mechanism in the spindle) Technics cassette deck and then on to a professional income with
real Hi Fi gear - Sansui amp, Nachamichi cassette deck, Thorens TT, and AR 3a's. But these are more mainstream gear and less colorful than the fledgling beginnings!