Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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Even a boom box or tranny ....
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I have enjoyed using a number of Tivoli Audio products over the years, none more so than the now discontinued portable PAL radio.
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Sound quality is excellent - full and well balanced - for such a small unit and flexibility is provided by headphone and auxiliary sockets ( I sometimes use a portable cd player with it ). It often accompanies me on my (UK) travels, gets used around the house and in the garden. I bought 2 years ago - great fun to use despite their limitations.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI keep "seeing" the title as "Boom Box of Tyranny".
Available on custom orders only...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-DDR8bowUM
When I first got a flatscreen tv I was appalled at the poor sound - thin and edgy. I had to improvise, ending up with two Tivoli Model Ones, their aux inputs wired to each tv output channel for stereo - with surprisingly good results.
But without remote/mute, and having to adjust two volume controls manually...
I finally got a soundbar.
The Tivolis found a good home in the bedroom, again wired as twin powered speakers to the Tivoli Model CD. A great range! Excellent on String Quartets - sonically the portables' acid test...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 01-07-18, 18:46.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI keep "seeing" the title as "Boom Box of Tyranny".
Heathkit anyone?
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostNever heard Harbeth or ATC Monitors? They major on neutrality and and accuracy to...get you closer...
...which is why they're often found in BBC and other recording studios. I've had my Harbeth C7mkIIs since 2001, wouldn't change them for anything...
..
Some folks find the ATC's a bit "harsh"
but the Finns know how to make wonderful speakers
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostWhen I was desperate for music and away from home in my late teens, I would listen on almost anything, such as my gf's tiny AM radio. My first hearing of the Schubert Quintet was on that squawk box, and I recall also the Toscanini Verdi Requiem (imagine!).
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostWhen I was desperate for music and away from home in my late teens, I would listen on almost anything, such as my gf's tiny AM radio. My first hearing of the Schubert Quintet was on that squawk box, and I recall also the Toscanini Verdi Requiem (imagine!).[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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At home I was lucky. My father bought a Ferrograph tape recorder (which I soon monopolised) when I was about 12, and soon after that we acquired an FM radio. In my later teens I used to visit the Audio Fair where I heard the revelatory Quad ESLs, speakers by Tannoy and lots of other wonderful kit. But didn't it take ages for portable kit to catch up! FM portable radios (later with tape players) and the Sony Walkman (tape then CD) came many years later. Hence the longevity of the AM squawk box (or Distortophone, as a colleague of mine dubbed it). Not only was the frequency range restricted, but the ubiquitous envelope detector (which kept the price down) produced quite severe distortion.
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