Sunday, November 6, 2011

The Many Types Of The Sony Boom Box And Hot Features

By Stan Roderbel


Sony Boom Box is a well known staple for all music lovers and has also been known by these slang names of jamming box or the ever favorite ghetto-blaster. A Boom Box is actually a radio in unique designs with huge speakers which gives you the additional features of playing cassette tapes or compact discs and recording them.

This is one of the most well known electronics of Sony's time. The speakers are made for extreme volume levels with the best clarity and added bass you want. You can also take them to work with you, camping and wherever else you may want to enjoy your music thanks to its ease of portability.

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Japan was the leading country where these different brand Boomer's were manufactured. At the beginning they only had radio capability and then in the 1970 groovy era eight track tape players. Late 1970 and early 1980 showed the magical addition of smaller cassette tapes which played better and sounded clearer. These could even be recorded on with its dual decks of cassette tape players.

As the popularity grew and more demand from consumers the different brands became extremely competitive against one another. Each manufacturer wanted their's to be the best, flashiest, loudest and with the most features. Soon though the big boomers were being transitioned out to more sleek, smaller designs which could be carried easily in a back pack, pocket or purse and be listened to from anywhere with battery power and much smaller earphones.

When people decided they really would like something smaller more svelte designs companies listened and the Walk-Man types of music players made their debut. These were big enough to hold a cassette tap or a compact disc in them and had forward, rewind, play and stop buttons on them. They all ran on battery power and had input links for small ear phones for easy listening.

Sony Boom Box was the most popular and still is today. Sophisticated versions with even more features included graphic equalizers, sound with LED or analog levels, speakers that were bigger and could be detached and inputs for either microphone's or earphones. The very special more extreme models even had 8-track tape players, television screens which played black and white or a record player turntable which played your favorite vinyls.




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