Sony Walkman II WM2 Red Portable Cassette Player

Walkman Ii. SONY Walkman II (1981) Wolf Review Model: Walkman Stereo Cassette Player WM-2 - Sony Corporation; Tokyo; Shape; Very small Portable or Pocket-Set (Handheld) < 8 inch Top Rated Seller Top Rated Seller salesbyeasy (1,555) 100%

Sony Walkman II Red Cassette Player
Sony Walkman II Red Cassette Player from www.just-cassette.com

In March 1979, at the request of Masaru Ibuka, the audio department modified the small recorder used by journalists, "Pressman", into a smaller recorder.After many people praised the good sound quality evaluation, Sony, under the leadership of Akio Morita, began to launch the Walkman in July 1979.Morita positioned Walkman in the youth market, emphasized youth. Dimensions (WHD) 30 x 109 x 80 mm / 1.2 x 4.3 x 3.1 inch; Notes; Transistors: 2SC536SP, 2SC536SP, 2SA608, 2SD1077L

Sony Walkman II Red Cassette Player

Released in 1981 it was the first real attempt to make the Walkman very small through innovative redesign and engineering of the TPS-L2 In this video I break down the history and development of the Walkman WM-2, the second Walkman released in 1981 The WM-2, or "Walkman II" as it was known, took the mantle from the TPS-L2 as the smallest stereo cassette player in the world, only just larger than the cassette it played.

Sony Walkman Ii Tape Player High Resolution Stock Photography and. In March 1979, at the request of Masaru Ibuka, the audio department modified the small recorder used by journalists, "Pressman", into a smaller recorder.After many people praised the good sound quality evaluation, Sony, under the leadership of Akio Morita, began to launch the Walkman in July 1979.Morita positioned Walkman in the youth market, emphasized youth. The WM-2, or "Walkman II" as it was known, took the mantle from the TPS-L2 as the smallest stereo cassette player in the world, only just larger than the cassette it played.

Sony Walkman II (WM2) playing tapes too fast, help? r/cassetteculture. The Sony Walkman II, also known as the WM-2 was SONY's follow up model to their very first Walkman the TPS-L2 Released in 1981 it was the first real attempt to make the Walkman very small through innovative redesign and engineering of the TPS-L2