Old Car Sounds
At the risk of dating myself...
As a kid in high school, it was a big deal to have
a 45 RPM record player mounted under your dash.
The records loaded through the bottom and they
played through the car radio. These things were
crude! The needle looked like a roofing nail!
Even though they were "shock mounted" a bump in the
road would raise hell. the records didn't last
very long.
Then the tape decks came out. There were two
companies making them Craig and Muntz. These were
four track units!
My first two tapes were a Mamas and Papas and a
Mothers of Invention.
It sounded great! I even hooked up my back
speakers to my vibrasonic unit.
What is vibrasonic?
Oh those Southern California cruising nights!
As a kid in high school, it was a big deal to have
a 45 RPM record player mounted under your dash.
The records loaded through the bottom and they
played through the car radio. These things were
crude! The needle looked like a roofing nail!
Even though they were "shock mounted" a bump in the
road would raise hell. the records didn't last
very long.
Then the tape decks came out. There were two
companies making them Craig and Muntz. These were
four track units!
My first two tapes were a Mamas and Papas and a
Mothers of Invention.
It sounded great! I even hooked up my back
speakers to my vibrasonic unit.
What is vibrasonic?
Oh those Southern California cruising nights!
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Comments
In essence it was a mechanical delay line, which gave a dealay of around 0.5 seconds between front and rear (and also introduced some horrible distortion). Of course, when you listened to rock music at high volume, it did'nt sound too bad...until you hit a bump-then the delay line would introduce all kinds of jarring noise! (Sor of like the theremin-like sounds on Beach Boy songs).
Ford called it Studiosonic sound.
They were made by Motorola.
I used to love those old tube radios, like in the 55 Chevy...it took a while to warm up and it would hum...a nice base-type sound...sometimes the "vibrator" in the radio would get screwy and you had to hit the radio to get it to work. Stricly AM band back then....FM was for weirdos and drug addicts who stayed up late in New York and listened to jazz...
I had two of these ripped off. the insurance co. paid for the replacements.
Five years later, the police called. My Muntz had shown up in a hock shop.
They also made some combo 4 and 8 track units that didn't work very well. A company called Tenna made these.
That radio of yours also has a black metal tube in it. It's an OZ4. They are usually the first one to go out.
There was a company making transistorized vibrators that were a direct plug in.
They last much longer and don't hum.
Funny how innovative people were back then! Yes, car stereos don't have it, but todays home stereos have simulated sounds, like "stadium, concert hall" etc. Same idea as that old reverb, only a clean, digital form.