Lasonic TRC-920 said:I remember people complaining and it being on the news and the city of Los Angeles putting bans on boomboxes, skateboarding and car cruising and it all led straight into car stereo ticketing, gang control, Rodney King, high taxes, unemployment and WAR!
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jaetee said:Lasonic TRC-920 said:I remember people complaining and it being on the news and the city of Los Angeles putting bans on boomboxes, skateboarding and car cruising and it all led straight into car stereo ticketing, gang control, Rodney King, high taxes, unemployment and WAR!
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I hear you, Lasonic...
Greatest words ever spoken amid all of that chaos! "Can't we all just get along? " - Rodney King
Personally, it's the one-piece boxes that particularly float my boat... While I can see the convenience and benefit of a 3-piece box, the one-piecers are really what kick-started the fad and caught my attention early on. And it's still that way.
Right now I have only one 3-piece box in my collection, a JVC PC-3 and I can live with that for the time being... Although I will admit I've been eyeballing some of the more prominent ones like the HiFi Studio 1 or the PC-55 as well.
Northerner said:All mine are one piecers apart from my Sanyo C7 which is a 5 piecer, got nothing in betweenUntil I picked up the C7 I would've said I wouldn't have anything but a one piecer but this C7 has really grown on me
I think you'll find 3 piecers go right back to the late 70s. I've got a 3 piece Hitachi 9140K from 1979 that is probably the best built box I've ever seen - over 11 kg and it has more bass than many 1 piece units. The classic 1 piece units with the central tape deck etc do have 'the look' though.LJV said:I definitely prefer one piece units. 3 pieces are conceptually one generation behind one piece boomboxes. They are just micro or mini HIFI with carrying handle and detachable speakers. Late 80s 3 pieces also marked the drop of quality relative to boomboxes, cheaper plastic, monolithic simplified design, dark tones, ending with black dull plastic, just as if they were following the decline and death of rock music. Gradually they've lost the casualness, youthfulness of bright or warm colored, shiny one piece devices of the early to mid-80s.
For me It's the esthetics that attracts me to one piece, but not even all one piece are ok by me. They have to be with analog radio, and wide dial that exceeds the width of central deck area. Digital tuner or narrow dial make it look like 3 piece, since speakers boxes become as high as the unit.
This is the one where you can actually see the transition, and I've considered it as rotten compromise, because it has round speaker covers, 3 way speakers, nice leds, and lots of knobs instead of sliders. What drives me away is top left detail, and unless I'm wrong that is completely obsolete equalizer with just 3 sliders, which is pathetic.
I think it is a Hitachi, but I'm not sure, since seller didn't leave any info, apart that it is Japanese.
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