How CD players lost their cool & why the Technics SL-P1200 didn’t.

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
  • Forty years ago CD players were the cool new thing. The first machines were amazing technological marvels with interesting designs. But when it came to launching the second generation players most manufacturers' models started to look pretty similar. In this video I'll explain what happened and then show that there were some exceptions - you just needed to think outside the (oblong) box. I then go on to demonstrate the exception(al) CD player I bought - a Technics SL-P1200.
    00:00 Show me the media
    02:52 Things started off well
    04:34 But then this happened
    06:32 So I bought this
    07:32 But I really wanted this
    08:53 Let’s look at the SL-P1200
    10:34 How quick
    11:15 So what can it do
    16:11 Summary
    16:56 Patreon credits
    LINKS
    Technics SL-P1200 machines for sale on ebay (AFFILIATED LINK) ebay.us/KOFfOz
    Audioscope (A retailer of classic HiFi - who I borrowed a couple of old pictures from) www.audioscope.net
    Vintage Chief (another retailer of classic HiFi who I borrowed a picture from) www.vintagechief.com
    Philips CD Prototype introduction video • PHILIPS Pinkeltje CD P...
    Vintage Brochures www.hifi-archiv.info
    The Vintage Knob's page on the Technics SL-P1200 www.thevintageknob.org/technic...
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @mikewifak
    @mikewifak Před 2 lety +962

    This is Grade A certified pure uncut techmoan. One of your best in my opinion, Matt. The only thing that could make it better is some belts to replace.

    • @RandallHayter
      @RandallHayter Před 2 lety +74

      And puppets. Don’t forget the puppets.

    • @clutchkman
      @clutchkman Před 2 lety +8

      I wondered if the laser might need replacement.

    • @hankjonkman1893
      @hankjonkman1893 Před 2 lety +31

      Oh look. The laser belt has disintigrated.

    • @clutchkman
      @clutchkman Před 2 lety +4

      @@hankjonkman1893 lol, I don’t know if it correlates but, on older cd based game consoles, the laser lens, or mechanism sometimes needs replacing, belts as well.

    • @abhijitmahajan2007
      @abhijitmahajan2007 Před 2 lety +11

      @@hankjonkman1893 no... It has "perished" 😅

  • @cjc363636
    @cjc363636 Před 2 lety +247

    I can't believe it! Techmoan did a piece on the SL-P1200! I used 2 of these in 1987/88 at a North Carolina FM station when I was 21 years old (overnight DJ at 'elevator' music station). Those decks were heavy as trucks and looked like they came from the future, and the first player I saw that had auto cue and pitch control on a CD player. Thanks for the memories! EDIT: I love the metal buttons, too! It does look like some sci-fi/Federation/Empire console standing by to fire the photon lasers or quad beams or whatever.

  • @davidchew
    @davidchew Před 2 lety +57

    I worked as a DJ in a club when this model was released and I the opportunity to use it for a while. It was a godsend, as it could zoom in down to a cue point on any song in the CD, just by typing in the track, time code, and frame number on the numeric keypad. The reason for the size and heft of this model is due to the fact that Technics was trying to make it easy (an obviously attract) for discos and clubs to replace their de facto turntables (the ubiquitous Technics SL-1200 - hence the same model number for this CD player with an extra P) by making it exactly the same dimensions. However, DJs panned it because the pitch control was reversed when compared to the SL-1200 turntable (push up to slow down and push down to speed up). But, as you pointed out, the speed at which it reads, and gets itself ready was to make it convenient for DJs. The feet of this model are exactly the same as the ones on the SL-1200, being vibration absorbing.
    I've been following you for years and years now, but have never been compelled to write anything until I saw this video. Your videos are truly wonderful, and my Saturday evenings (I'm in Malaysia - GMT +8) are always a treat when a new video drops! Cheers!

    • @zlatanzakic
      @zlatanzakic Před 8 měsíci +1

      Unfortunately, Technics simply had no luck with DJ CD players on the market. First SL-P1200, followed by SL-DZ1200. Not even making it look and appear like a DJ turntable helped. Pioneer took over just like that.

  • @DenonDJUSA
    @DenonDJUSA Před 2 lety +134

    Matt, great vid thank you!
    As I was a 23-year employee of DENON, you may not have known that their 1983 "DN-3000F" model was the first professional CD player to market. US Retail Price: $8,500.00
    Features like, Auto Cue, Cue to Music, 1/75 Frame Search, Pitch, Fader Start, Pro Outputs and so much more were all developed by DENON. The SL-P1200 is based off the DN-3000F and nice job they did.

  • @motodevcam
    @motodevcam Před 2 lety +178

    Yes, back when I was on radio those functions were essential. We had later technics drawer loaders but they had all the same features. One handy function was the "peak search" which very quickly scanned the disc then cued it up at the highest volume on the track so you could PFL the peaks and set the channel output accordingly. This was important because of the limiters at the transmitter site that would maintain an output volume. If the peak was too high the limiter would pull the gain right down but then as soon as a queter bit followed it would then be too quite and take a second to go back up. Setting the levels correctly stopped this from happening. Whenever the engineer was in the building he could tell instantly if the levels were too high and would often run down to the studio, poke his head around the door and just say "LEVELS!" With a raised disapproving eye brow!!

    • @goeland4585
      @goeland4585 Před 2 lety +7

      I had a joke a ready that started with "That's another level of..." but I can't seem to complete it. 🤔

    • @kona702
      @kona702 Před 2 lety +7

      @@MacPhantom same! I usually set my levels first with a couple songs, then do the peak search to make sure that it doesn't go too high at that particular passage.. also another cool feature on my old Sony deck is that I can program the tracks for side A and B, and it shows me the time used up. Then all I have to do is push play and then at the end flip the tape and push play again for side B. Great features that have all but disappeared from CD players after the 90s.

    • @Charlesb88
      @Charlesb88 Před 2 lety +16

      @@goeland4585 Don’t worry, audio jokes can be bought cheaply in volume so if you can’t remember the end too that joke I’ll sell you another one that sounds just as funny. By a joke from me and you’ll never be in treble. I’ll have you reeling with laughter. Just be sure to adjust the punch line level appropriately. I never bass my jokes on lowbrow humor so you’ll always be the grooviest joke teller around when you tell the old joke “why did the chicken auto reverse? To get to the other side”. Don’t worry that was the vinyl joke I will be giving away for free just for the record. 😂🤣

    • @nickcpv
      @nickcpv Před 2 lety +1

      Couldn’t your engineer use some soft compressor (w/ gain) to solve that problem automatically?

    • @marcusdamberger
      @marcusdamberger Před 2 lety +8

      @@nickcpv They probably had five different pieces of equipment on the output chain sweetening the audio and level limiting etc. I bet all analog based. The level limiter was probably aggressively hard limited if any peak audio level went over, and would duck way down.. I remember a station we visited when I was taking one of the DJ classes at our collage, half a rack of 1RU (rack unit) pieces of gear all with flashing LED lights and meters depending on what that gear was accomplishing. It was impressive to look at. However, just a few years later our collage station got an Orban Otimod with DPS control for all the audio processing that only took up one rack unit of space and sounded as good and better than that half a rack of gear the other Top 40 (number one in market) station was doing. Plus none of the artifacts like audio limiting dropping everything by 10dB as soon as it detects high levels. You could crank up the sliders on the audio console and bury the meters, and it still sounded fine over the air. It was really amazing and failproof for those students not paying attention to levels.

  • @jtmichaelson
    @jtmichaelson Před 2 lety +223

    Wow! That is a beautiful machine. The radio station I worked for in the 90s had all of the same features but was a rack unit. But the tabletop model is just gorgeous.

    • @damagedgears
      @damagedgears Před 2 lety +14

      I was going to say that this would have been a common-ish sight in a radio station with extremely fast TOC read, queueing it to the right time stamp, and the eventual addition of XLR out. IIRC, Technics/Teac still makes a variation of this machine in a single rack unit and iPod/MP3 integration. Not as nifty as this guy tho.

    • @guruoo
      @guruoo Před 2 lety

      @@JamesHalfHorse I'd love to see one of those reviewed.

  • @Max16032
    @Max16032 Před 2 lety +13

    The cueing-by-frame system was actually the backbone of DJ mixing when using CD players. The Pioneer CDJ-500 was a very popular early DJ deck that not only featured a jogwheel and pitch control, but also offered seamless looping via the now-standard in-out yellow buttons. DJs were obviously skeptical about CDs at first compared to vinyl, but as soon as the 2000s kicked in and the CDJ-1000 deck arrived, the CD took over.

  • @MIK33EY
    @MIK33EY Před 2 lety +97

    I also remember when CD’s launched - I was a young teenager at the time in Australia. My Dad came home with a Teac all in one system with dual cassette decks, with a basic CD player below (also had a radio & turntable) Thing you need to know is that Australian Teac is like Goodmans, in other words the polar opposite of Teac in the UK. (It was so basic you could only advance forward or back by the whole track, not seek mid track it didn’t remember it’s last position if you turned it off and there was no play time displayed only track numbers) Anyhoo, for several years after buying the system the only CD’s that we’re bought had to have on their label that they were either a ADD or DDD recording and if it wasn’t listed then it wasn’t purchased. Oh, and I was banned from using it, so even if I bought my own CD’s I wasn’t allowed to play them, only the “special” CD’s were played. This was more than infuriating to a kid who had discovered the joys of music and was consuming as much of it as possible, discovering 60’s as well as the current charts of the mid eighties at the time. All ended well when I bought my own Sony player almost a year later having saved like crazy from my paper round. Dad wasn’t jealous in the slightest 🤢🤢😂😇

    • @drozcompany4132
      @drozcompany4132 Před 2 lety +6

      ADD discs were rare. I only have one or two in my collection. Most were AAD or DDD. First all-digital recording I bought was Brothers in Arms in like 1985 or 6. It was amazing compared to the AAD discs in there was no hiss at all.

    • @MIK33EY
      @MIK33EY Před 2 lety +7

      @@drozcompany4132 Dad had/bought a fair number of classical CD’s (more than 10 less than 20) that were ADD, especially Philips Mastered ones that I seem to remember. He too had Brothers in Arms once he realised what Dire Straits was all about and that it was DDD - I think he thought Dire Straits was “young people’s” music and thus initially was disinterested.

    • @jonrichards333
      @jonrichards333 Před 2 lety +1

      Goodmans, if there was irony in a brand name, that was it

    • @zeniktorres4320
      @zeniktorres4320 Před 2 lety +2

      @@drozcompany4132 Me too 😄 I bought Brothers in Arms because it was DDD, my first DDD 😄

  • @GadgetAddict
    @GadgetAddict Před 2 lety +389

    Until you open the tray, the disc is both in there, and.not in there.

    • @3rdalbum
      @3rdalbum Před 2 lety +108

      Ahh. Schrödinger's Disc.

    • @joeblow5214
      @joeblow5214 Před 2 lety +16

      @@3rdalbum Beat me to it lol.

    • @inshadowz
      @inshadowz Před 2 lety +7

      I disc, therefore I am.

    • @mhoppy6639
      @mhoppy6639 Před 2 lety +14

      @@3rdalbum ahhh. Yes. But Heisenberg might make you less certain of your knowledge of said disc’s precise location!
      Is it spinning or not spinning.

    • @john2264
      @john2264 Před 2 lety +3

      In oneness there is no disc or player or anyone to know that, it's just what's unfolding.

  • @ZGryphon
    @ZGryphon Před 2 lety +45

    In addition to its cool quirkiness and unusual capabilities, I find something very appealing about the SL-P1200's user interface. It looks and sounds very tactile, in a way that these things usually weren't by that time. The number pad buttons, in particular, sound like they must be _intensely_ satisfying to press.
    Also, this brings back two early-CD memories:
    1) My first CD deck was one of the boring black drawer models (if memory serves, it was a Garrard), but a short while into its life, it developed a weird fault: it wouldn't work with the top shell of the cabinet installed. We found this out when it stopped working and my father took the top off to investigate, at which point it worked fine until he put it back together. To solve this problem, he built a replacement top shell out of plexiglas, making it possibly the only drawer-loader you _could_ see the disc inside.
    2) A friend in college had a multi-disc changer back when that was still gee-whiz moon-rocket tech, but it had the weirdest shuffle function I've ever seen. It appeared to be absolutely, truly, 100% random. It didn't check off played tracks or prevent itself from playing two adjacent tracks in a row; it just chose a random track from the pool of all that were loaded every time. I think it did force a disc change each time, but if it only had one CD in it, it would occasionally get into streaks where its RNG just kept rolling the same track number over and over.

  • @ageary
    @ageary Před 2 lety +151

    Its no coincidence its named after the Technics SL-1200 series of direct-drive turntables originally manufactured from October 1972 until 2010. Built to last and give perfect precise playback. Thank you Technics.

    • @drdelewded
      @drdelewded Před 2 lety +10

      The SL-1200 is still being made.. its at Mk vii now though..

    • @bluerizlagirl
      @bluerizlagirl Před 2 lety +7

      This was a machine with big boots to fill. The SL-1200D had become the weapon of choice for DJs, on the air and in the clubs; and Matsushita knew customers would be expecting as much control over positioning in time with CDs as a fast-starting, fully manual turntable could give with records. Hence the crisp, positive action of the switches, and the resolution of the motion sensor on the search dial with its balance weight carefully designed to mimic the feel of a record on a turntable platter.
      When you've got a quarter of a million listeners out there or just a few people on the dance floor, you don't want buttons that slop about and leave you wondering whether you pressed them hard enough. You can always tell a precision instrument by the way it _feels_.

    • @sparky6086
      @sparky6086 Před 2 lety +2

      This CD player was mainly for dance club DJ's who needed to "cut & scratch" and to sync the rhythm from record to record in order to keep people on the dance floor, like they were able to directly physically do by touching their pair of spinning 12 inch analog records which facilitated an uninterrupted but spur of the moment changing stream of music.

    • @bluerizlagirl
      @bluerizlagirl Před 2 lety +3

      @@sparky6086 They were also used in local radio stations, where it's usual for presenters to operate all the machinery themselves.
      Obviously in a dance club, you want to maintain an uninterrupted flow of evenly-spaced beats; but even as a humble DJ on medium wave in the back end of nowhere you still want the favourite song of the listener for whom you have just read out a birthday greeting to start dead on time, and you want the final drum beat of the last record of your show to sound exactly one second before the pips as though it were the first of seven.
      I've done both kinds of DJ work, and they present their own special challenges, but the common thread is precise fingertip control of exactly when the music starts.

    • @drdelewded
      @drdelewded Před 2 lety +1

      @@bluerizlagirl digicarts with extended memory killed that in radio

  • @JFHeroux
    @JFHeroux Před 2 lety +5

    @ Techmoan As a DJ in the late 80's and early 90's, I worked with those CD decks a lot. They were the best for our needs. One important thing to note is that the weight of the machine would help prevent skips, since dance floor vibrations and bumps on the equipment would make a CD skip. I remember we didn't need to install those on a rubber band suspension like the SL-1200 record players, so either there was a small buffer in the SLP-1200 or there was a physical skip prevention mechanism.
    Of course, the pitch control slider was the most important feature for us as it made it possible to mix (beat-to-beat) dance music tracks. Also, I remember how fine the search function was. This was very important for us to cue the track at the exact beat where we wanted it to start for the beat-to-beat mix to work. Along with its SL-1200 cousin, the SLP-1200 is a legend of that bygone era when DJs actually had to work to earn their pay. Nowadays, the new generation simply let the computer mix tracks together, replacing the art of mixing with computerized precision.

    • @ruikazane5123
      @ruikazane5123 Před 2 lety +1

      Felt that last part...to be honest they should not be called DJs anymore. Or that's where the term EDM comes in because it's all electronic and done with a computer
      No offense to the new age peops but that's the truth...it became pointless to be a DJ when there are a lot of people that can mix those tracks even on their phones and get paid for that. All I can do is remember and know that there were real DJs that play with discs and even experience trying my luck at it

    • @JFHeroux
      @JFHeroux Před 2 lety +1

      @@ruikazane5123 Your comment made me realize that the DJ contest I won in 1991 would have absolutely no value in this world. After all, a lot of the score was for how good your technique was. Without remembering the full details, I guess we were scored on style and the ambiance we created, but at the time, the way you technically executed your set counted for a lot.
      Also, there was no better feeling that pulling off the perfect mix in a packed club. Only when you messed-up did the crowd notice your work, and that was alright by me. :)

    • @ruikazane5123
      @ruikazane5123 Před 2 lety

      @@JFHeroux Some fellows remember there was scores on the moves too. Like being in sync with the mix you are doing and even tricks like flipping those discs around like the Globetrotters and serving the people like a pro bartender...
      Of course...nothing beats the feel of actually getting it through without mistakes, much harder to me being assigned to the sound reinforcement stuff back then. High risk and potentially higher reward!

    • @asanisi
      @asanisi Před rokem +1

      Yeah, apparently Technics had a bit of a streak with the products named ‘1200’. Ishkur wrote in his magnificent music guide that he's seen those vinyl decks drop from heights or from moving cars and work fine afterwards. Rave workhorses, they were.

  • @TorontoJon
    @TorontoJon Před 2 lety +78

    1:20 YES! I've always loved the kinetics (or animated quality) of physical media moving and progressing on their specific devices (records, reel-to-reel, compact cassette, etc.) and that was most often missing when it came to CD's and certainly laserdiscs, DVD's, and Blu-rays.

  • @DjadamGee
    @DjadamGee Před 2 lety +65

    That Rakim album (CD) was AMAZING!!!!

    • @wizdude
      @wizdude Před 2 lety +12

      It’s “The 18th Letter - The Book of Life” and he’s playing cd #2. An excellent choice of music :-)

    • @DjadamGee
      @DjadamGee Před 2 lety +3

      @@wizdude Yes and couldn't agree more!

    • @sgtcreasegrease
      @sgtcreasegrease Před 2 lety +3

      @@wizdude 18th Letter also has some joints on it too! Wish Ra would do a whole album with Premier...

    • @bryanb30
      @bryanb30 Před 2 lety +2

      Don’t get one started! That was when rap or hip hop was actually music 🎶, creative and uncorrupted.

    • @TheDistrict644
      @TheDistrict644 Před 2 lety +3

      @@wizdude The 18th Letter? I thought that was the Paid in Full cd. The Paid in Full cd was the amazing cd. The Paid in Full Platinum cd was a double cd and the one to get as well. The follow the leader album was the 2nd album and was great as well as their third album, Let the rhythm hit em. Probably the one that put them out there, do to more tracks on it. I found the 18th letter cd in a thrift store years ago. I only recalled a few tracks on it I liked and if I'm not mistaken, that was his last cd solo. Eric B and Rakim did all album's together except for when Rakim did the 18th letter .

  • @ZReviews
    @ZReviews Před 2 lety +5

    I don't even own many CD's anymore and yet I sitll would love one of these to use. Every feature just seems so fast, useful and important.

  • @Filtersloth
    @Filtersloth Před rokem +32

    I think there is no doubt that this channel is the best thing that ever happened to CZcams.
    Just consistently great.

    • @williampotter2098
      @williampotter2098 Před rokem +1

      Do you really have that little to do with your time? Do you really have to watch someone explain how the departure of CDs as a playback media is because people like to see things turning? This video was asinine.

    • @thehussar5604
      @thehussar5604 Před rokem +3

      @@williampotter2098 Says the guy commenting on a comment of a video he didn't even like.

  • @Bobby_Snoof
    @Bobby_Snoof Před 2 lety +46

    The Technics brand has tried some original things...I really like their devices.

    • @russellhltn1396
      @russellhltn1396 Před 2 lety +2

      Let's not forget the Technics turntable is/was the standard for many radio stations/DJs. Some models come up to speed in 1/3 of a turn. Perfect for a radio DJ.

  • @MrTonglong
    @MrTonglong Před 2 lety +20

    I used to have one of these! I purchased a broken unit for $20 from a junk store, managed to fix it, then sold it off for about $300. This was about 5 years ago. I have some regret getting rid of it, but it was what started the hobby of fixing electronics for me. Thanks for reminding me of this beast :)

  • @richardisaacs567
    @richardisaacs567 Před 2 lety +11

    I never realised how much this would have in common with the CDJs by Pioneer from the early 2000s, nice to se how this technology progressed. Reckon this must have been used in clubs and for mix cds early on.

  • @brantisonfire
    @brantisonfire Před 2 lety +12

    The feature that adds three seconds between each track would be useful for making copies to tape, especially if you’re playing those tapes back in a deck that can do random track search. Those systems need a few seconds of silence between tracks to determine the end of one song and start of another.

  • @jonathankleinow2073
    @jonathankleinow2073 Před 2 lety +49

    Our first CD player was an SL-P111, as seen at 6:02 at the bottom. My parents won it at some mystery dinner theater thing they went to. It lasted quite a long time and was part of my hi-fi in college up until 2006 or so, when it stopped recognizing discs. It was very basic, but it was simple to operate and did its job well.

    • @JoeranKrusch
      @JoeranKrusch Před 2 lety +8

      The 111 used the same laser as the 1200. and that very same laser probably went bad. The early range is notorious for their lasers going bad. But 20+ years is more than anyone would have dreamed of them lasting, I suppose.

    • @EberKlaushartinger
      @EberKlaushartinger Před 2 lety +5

      Maybe it is repairable.

    • @IThinkYouLookLarvely
      @IThinkYouLookLarvely Před 2 lety +8

      Similarly, I stopped recognising music from after 2006.

  • @SBBUK
    @SBBUK Před 2 lety +73

    Very cool, interesting to see this functionality on a machine from the 80s, I thought this didn't appear until the pioneer CDJ players in the 90s! You would love the technics sl-dz1200 Mat it's a ridiculous hybrid of a CDJ and an Sl1200 turntable...

    • @ryanjofre
      @ryanjofre Před 2 lety +1

      Gotta try it.

    • @BIGBIGBIG
      @BIGBIGBIG Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah I was just thinking if you had a pair of these you could probably do some crappy DJing on the haha

    • @a.mikasaan
      @a.mikasaan Před 2 lety +1

      As an owner of several CDJ500s, I can definitely say that I’d love to see techmoan review one. Hell, if I could I’d probably send him one if I had one to send in proper working order 😅

  • @ruthun
    @ruthun Před 2 lety +4

    Content creators, take note. this is the kind of timeless content that we will be watching in 50 years time. Thank you, Techmoan. ALways awesome to see you in the feed. 🙂

  • @ceyhunpasaoglu
    @ceyhunpasaoglu Před 2 lety

    I really like how you combine your personal taste with interesting information on various technological devices and create video essays like this one. They are really enjoyable to watch, and for that, thank you! :)

  • @bensonwr
    @bensonwr Před 2 lety +46

    Used to maintain those players at the BBC World service. I remember the weight. Take a trolly was the advice. The headphone socket and the power switch were the main things to go wrong. But they were built like tanks . All of those buttons meant the first thing the SM (Studio Manager) would do when they came in was to ensure it was in their prefered mode. Can't rely on the previous person to have left it so. Thanks for bringing back memories . Studer A80 Or Revox PR99 next?

    • @daveme3582
      @daveme3582 Před 2 lety

      Happy owner of an X edition here. The one thing Ive been dealing with, is the open button becoming physically finicky. Feels as if its in need of some lube to keep it from hanging up upon its guide rail. Would love to know if you also encountered this and had any advice for me on how to remedy this? Techs from the hey day of these devices with first hand knowledge are so in need these days. Thanks much.

  • @TH3mrBROWN
    @TH3mrBROWN Před 2 lety +51

    Reminded me of the portable CD player I had as a kid in the early 2000s, it had a tiny window through which I loved seeing the disc spin. Just something nice about seeing physical movement that results it music.

    • @drfsupercenter
      @drfsupercenter Před 2 lety +2

      Most portable CD players had that. I even modified one of mine, to test the anti-skip feature, so I could open the lid while it was playing and stop the disc from spinning, and count how long until the audio stopped. Those 60-second buffers really worked!

    • @Knaeckebrotsaege
      @Knaeckebrotsaege Před 2 lety

      @@drfsupercenter if you bypassed the lid sensor and had antiskip on, you could even switch the disk whilst playing. completely useless party trick

    • @drfsupercenter
      @drfsupercenter Před 2 lety +1

      @@Knaeckebrotsaege I never thought to try that! Would it actually start playing the same position on the new disc?

    • @Knaeckebrotsaege
      @Knaeckebrotsaege Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@drfsupercenter if it has a track at the same position it would just continue playing, possibly with a bit of data garbage/earrape in between. At least that's what my Sony D-E301 did

  • @MikaelTh
    @MikaelTh Před rokem +10

    I had the front loaded SL-777 for 30 years, it had many of the same features, incl. the jog-wheel, which was very convenient for me transcribing music: you could make it play a single chord in the music.
    It was also the first CD player with a 1-bit D/A converter and praised as a milestone as that.
    As a reminiscent of a whole visible disc, it had a small window to a 45 degree mirror to the lit spinning disc.
    I bought the last available laser and when that finally got dim at last the party was over.
    Very sad, I really loved it. 😥

    • @remoapeter
      @remoapeter Před rokem

      I have the 770, only recently the drawer refused to open - probably needs a new belt for its motor. How many hours of use does it take for a laser to go dim?

  • @jazzlover10000
    @jazzlover10000 Před 2 lety +22

    The B&O CD players hit the swap meets for like $10 each a few years ago. Those were also pretty nice see-through units.

    • @jasperklm
      @jasperklm Před 2 lety

      So @teachmoan get an B&O

    • @nigelparker5886
      @nigelparker5886 Před 2 lety

      torchwood They we’re fairly low rated from an audiophile point of view! Never made it into serious hi-fi reviews anywhere either! Just expensive Scandi pretence! Sorry to say! Cheers

    • @mr_gerber
      @mr_gerber Před rokem +3

      @@nigelparker5886 In contrast to the HiFi-market of course, completely lacking expensive pretense.

    • @nigelparker5886
      @nigelparker5886 Před rokem

      @@mr_gerber Not of course back in their time, when they were nicely made expensive mid-fi at best! Quad for instance, made superb audiophile equipment that wasn’t cheap, but were light years ahead of B&O pretentious gear! B&O was for the trendy Scandinavia furnishing crowd only! Sorry, but it was the case! Cheers

  • @revidual
    @revidual Před 2 lety +20

    Early CD players may have been well built, and expensive, but the internal DAC were only 4 times over sampling and resulted in a harsh sound which led audiophiles to write off the technology. This issue was only resolved with the arrival of Bitstream or 1 Bit players. My first was the £900 Meridian 206B, with its glass fronted turntable loading drawer.

    • @daveme3582
      @daveme3582 Před 2 lety +1

      True. There were a handful of outliers who managed to make it sound decent tho. Then you have the fans of NOS dacs. I own a couple and find the sound quite pleasing. Also own a Prism Lyra 1 which is a totally different beast. And tube buffered dacs. So many ways of getting unique pleasing sound. IMO one of the best bang for the $ are the MOTU M series A/D D/A boxes. Got a used M4 for under $200. Real shame no one makes an affordable belt driven CD transport these days. Just not enough of us hold outs to justify the effort it seems.

    • @dougodyssey50
      @dougodyssey50 Před 19 dny

      True. Without digital output connections, they are what they are. An external DAC solves all the audio issues. I remember how awful my Dad's Denon sounded and being even more disappointed that he couldn't connect a DAC because Denon hadn't bothered with any kind of digital output.

  • @bloqk16
    @bloqk16 Před 2 lety +34

    Pitch control was an aspect for CD players I always sought out, as when playing popular songs from CDs of 1960s, I want the tempo of the songs to be the same as they sounded on the US Top 40 radio formats of that era; as they invariably slightly sped up the vinyl record turntables when playing the songs.
    In addition, the first record turntable I got with my component stereo system in 1975, I discovered later-on that the turntable ran slightly fast when measured with a strobe light/'disc; so my ears got accustomed to that tempo sound.
    When I got my first CD player in the late 1980s; which did not have pitch control, those 1960s songs by the Rolling Stones sounded sluggish in tempo because then were being played at the true playback speed.

    • @darrell20741
      @darrell20741 Před 2 lety +2

      I wonder if my Bee Gees records played too fast. I tried real hard to keep up with their voices, the pitch was just too high, but I was stayin alive.

    • @Prizm44
      @Prizm44 Před 2 lety +2

      Were they speeding up the tracks intentionally? I thought that was a more modern underhanded tactic to fit more songs in, or fit in more advertisements. Once or twice I’ve heard a song on the radio that has definitely been pitch shifted. I also seem to remember reading something about some record companies intentionally slowing down the track before giving a copy to the radio station to compensate for speed up.

    • @rogerb5615
      @rogerb5615 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Prizm44 Certain radio stations time-compress (read: speed up) talk shows in realtime by recording the audio stream then starting playback 60 seconds later (after two commercials) and airing the compressed recording. At the end of the segment, the compressed recording ends at the same time as the actual stream. Atlanta GA's WSB was notorious for this, using it to sell more ad spots on a very popular afternoon talk show.

    • @bloqk16
      @bloqk16 Před 2 lety

      @@Prizm44 There are urban legends from the 1960s/70s about (US) Contemporary Hit radio stations (aka Top 40) being subtle with speeding up record playback. But, there are also anecdotal accounts of (US) radio stations in the 1980s that sped up songs.
      When I lived in the San Francisco Bay Area in the early 1970s, I recall radio station KLIV (1590 AM, San Jose) hearing contemporary songs played on that station where the 45 rpm discs were sped up to around 3 percent or more; the tempo of the songs were noticeably faster than what was heard on KFRC and KYA of that era.

    • @Frankonero12
      @Frankonero12 Před 2 lety

      @@darrell20741 I laughed at this in a Bee Gees high pitched voice "Ha Ha Ha Ha (staying aliiiiiive)"

  • @gordanpavlovic8224
    @gordanpavlovic8224 Před 2 lety +1

    This is the fastest I ever got from "What's he on about, it looks like a cashier machine, horrible" to:"OMG now I want one". What a great piece of history you found there!

  • @cpufrost
    @cpufrost Před 2 lety +13

    I've had the SL-P1300 since early 2003. Been used in a DJ/live music environment for some time. Very solid machine. Also near impossible to make it skip which is important if its not far from a stack of Bassmaxx Trips with Skooter pounding at 135dB! Thank goodness for earplugs! ;-D

  • @lo-firobotboy7112
    @lo-firobotboy7112 Před 2 lety +17

    The first CD and CD player I ever saw was at a high school party circa 1988 when a fellow band-mate was DJ-ing using a Sony D-88 with the disc exposed. Pretty cool little machine. He had a flashlight aimed at the exposed section of the disk reflecting rainbow patterns on the rest of his gear. High-tech indeed for a basement party in the burbs!

  • @Luscious3174
    @Luscious3174 Před 2 lety +11

    Technics really did make some seriously good audiophile gear back in the 80's - their DBX tape decks, amplifiers and equalizers were up there with the best, not even mentioning the legendary SL-P1200 DD turntable.
    FWIW: I've got a JVC CD player with a motorized glass top that also shows the disc spinning in all it's glory (FS-SD550). Bought it brand new when they were still being sold. You can in fact see one being used in the Will Smith movie I Robot. Close to 20 years old I'm guessing, runs perfect and plays CD-R's like a champ too. It's a great little machine.

  • @emancaindec9731
    @emancaindec9731 Před 2 lety +25

    One of my favorite Techmoan episodes! Yes, he has a point, there's really no soul or romanticism when it comes to interacting with a average-looking disk-drawer type of CD player. Gotta admit that CD player looks unique. Kinda looks like a typewriter or cash register of sorts.

  • @ph11p3540
    @ph11p3540 Před rokem +9

    I don't care if CDs are no longer cool. Modern digital formats can crap out and the cloud can turn stormy. So I keep my old CD players and CD collection. Back up for back ups.

  • @northsurrey
    @northsurrey Před 2 lety +48

    Good to see this player again. I used the BBC ones extensively when I was a studio manager and Radio One used them before buying Studers. The Studers were better as they remembered the cue points set by the operator/DJ on discs even if they were removed and replaced. Also worth mentioning that the Technics design mirrored the SL1200 turntable (same feet and pitch control layout).
    By the way the Technics had the ability to access index points using the Index button but I don’t think this was ever used on a commercial CD unless anyone knows different?

    • @mikeselectricstuff
      @mikeselectricstuff Před 2 lety +11

      I think indexes were more common on classical music to indicate movements etc.

    • @pyndahvickers946
      @pyndahvickers946 Před 2 lety +1

      And Manowar’s "The Triumph of Steell".

    • @robsayer8028
      @robsayer8028 Před 2 lety +4

      I did notice that the pitch slider is reversed compared to the SL1200 though. On this CD player you push the pitch control away for an increase in speed and pull towards you for a decrease, whereas on the SL1200 it's the opposite.

    • @DJNeiloSF
      @DJNeiloSF Před 2 lety +2

      IIRC the Studer/Revox machines also had that index function which was good to have for playing those commercial music beds used on jingles and ads.

    • @Leonards-leopard
      @Leonards-leopard Před 2 lety

      Pretty certain there are index points on atom heart mother, though it’s been years since I’ve heard it on cd

  • @cruisingfanatic
    @cruisingfanatic Před 2 lety +5

    Beautiful piece of equipment... I remember when the Technics dealer at the time phoned and said it has arrived, I couldn't wait, so excited, I had to carry this beast through town and on then on the bus to home but it was worth the chronic back pain and bruised knuckles at the time. Then I worked at a local radio station in Dunstable Technical Operator and we had the ASC versions of which I was a bit jealous off, these were hammed in the studio but survived well. Great video it brought back some amazing memories.

  • @TATICMOOR
    @TATICMOOR Před 2 lety +2

    A wonderful single disc player and I don't blame you for having one as it does everything one could want. My stereo separates stack is the Aiwa DX-9100M and years later got the sub-woofer too. It came with a single disc player. I bought it new at £1000 round about 35+ years ago. It is still working away, and the only parts replaced was the number of stylus needles and a turntable bent x1. That is until my nephew wrecked the CD player on me. I couldn't find a single replacement player, only a 5-disc interchanger which I hate for all the noise when switching out single discs. The only time I used the multi disc function was with compilation discs to load up the five trays.

  • @LowdownBoy
    @LowdownBoy Před 2 lety +10

    Found a technics 5 way cd "changer" carousel at a local thrift store. You can change/reload/reorder the discs while still playing a disc. Got a bit more features like the multi disc shuffle, playlist queue, and live pitch adjustment with bypass (the fun one) 😀

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 Před 2 lety +2

      My Technics 5 cd changer still going strong many years on. In a stack, can only be on top. But the cd swap out while playing feature is cool.

    • @jessihawkins9116
      @jessihawkins9116 Před 2 lety

      this video is about the sl-p1200 CD player, not a cheap consumer grade cd changer 🤨

  • @smacksalad
    @smacksalad Před 2 lety +71

    You hit on a point, keeping the media out of sight. I didnt care about this at the time, at all. But now, there is something I like about seeing the media, or maybe I'm just trying to make myself feel better about being about to spend an inordinate amount on a TEAC reel to reel four track :)

    • @thepirategamerboy12
      @thepirategamerboy12 Před 2 lety +1

      @@HankPanky Pretty much.

    • @drfsupercenter
      @drfsupercenter Před 2 lety +1

      Do you rip open your VCRs to watch old movies?
      Hiding the media wasn't uncommon at all, in fact almost every type of player did this besides some of the audio formats.
      CD was based on laserdisc and I don't know of any laserdisc players that let you see the disc.
      It's spinning so fast that you wouldn't be seeing much of anything, anyway.

  • @StarionX
    @StarionX Před 2 lety +6

    I always wanted a front loading player. While I never got one, I did eventually find a gem in a mint Pioneer PD-M6 (The first 6-disc model?) I found in a random thrift for $5 USD. It's a staple of my hi-fi set up. I always wanted one of those 6-disc Pioneer units when I was a kid.
    There is only one other drawer loading unit that I liked and would love to own someday. The Pioneer P-D70 was gold and silver with a digital meter, almost matching the units they sold sometime around that time. A very beautiful machine.

  • @kajyakuzonik9130
    @kajyakuzonik9130 Před rokem

    You've done it AGAIN! You managed to make something so mundane (for me) into something SO FASCINATING!

  • @ignorance-on-fire
    @ignorance-on-fire Před 2 lety +7

    I was looking into buying a small stereo system for my home, and I remember going to the electronics store as a child and seeing row upon row of ever so slightly different cd stereo systems, so I was expecting a similar experience. (I was under no illusions that I would get to see the dozens of styles of the early 00s, but I expected four or five at least.) Unfortunately, I was given exactly one opinion, and it wasn’t one I was crazy about, so I went home empty handed. I totally agree with you about most CD players being bland as anything, and this one is quite exciting! I may do some searching on the internet for something along these lines. I’ve been enjoying your videos for a few months and I cannot wait to see more.

  • @museum1401
    @museum1401 Před 2 lety +21

    The base of that thing looks exactly like the SL-1210 turntables - the standard for club DJs and incredibly hefty to help minimise vibrations/skipping. What a beast.

    • @ssjaken
      @ssjaken Před 2 lety +1

      Technics also made DJ CD players. Basically the competitor to the CDJ from pioneer.
      I'd love to get a set for my collection

    • @lolatu4402
      @lolatu4402 Před 2 lety +3

      This player was one of (if not the) first club CDJ decks. They were pretty common in NYC DJ booths back in the 90s. I had a few DJ gigs where these machines were in the booth and used them. I preferred turntables, but really enjoyed some of its features, and actually used the cue effect (like in the video "pump up the volume") in sets. It sounded pretty cool with the right samples. "Pump up the volume" is perfect!

    • @museum1401
      @museum1401 Před 2 lety +3

      @@lolatu4402 Nice... I remember there was quite a stigma around CD-based DJ'ing here in the UK during the 90s, at least for club DJs. It was quite snobby, looking back.

    • @Mentski
      @Mentski Před 2 lety +1

      @@ssjaken Denon were more Pioneers competitor than Technics ever were. They actually beat Technics to making a CD DJ player with a spinning platter, barely anybody speaks about that. I still use a pair of the later DN-SC3900s to this day.
      Technics pretty much bowed out of the CDDJ market quite early on due to Denon and Pioneer having the market covered, and the SL-DZ1200 never quite working the way it should (in fact, it took a hacker to modify the firmware to make them accurate.)

    • @reno5159
      @reno5159 Před 2 lety

      @@Mentski Was thinking of picking up a pair of sc3900s. Have you tried it with DVS nd does it work? The SL-DZ1200 would be sick in a hifi, would look great in the booth but there buggy fuckers haha! I’m happy with my CDJ-1000s for digital playback, but I miss the rotating platter! Like keeping the 1210s clear for real vinyl as well. Bun having to swap over cables mid set to change from digital to analogue😂

  • @timothystockman7533
    @timothystockman7533 Před 2 lety +7

    The first CD player which I saw and heard was a Kyocera vertical-load unit, at the Chicago summer CES at McCormick Place. The disc it was playing was one of the first CBS/Sony popular discs: the Bob James / Earl Klugh "One On One" album. It was fascinating to watch the speed of rotation change as it accessed different tracks. This was completely different than LPs and tapes, but not completely foreign to me, because I had a Pioneer VP-1000 Laserdisc player back at home. Both CAV and CLV LD rotated very fast, and it was interesting seeing the comparatively slow rotation of the CD.

  • @houstonduckman1
    @houstonduckman1 Před 2 lety +1

    There was a great looking and sounding CD player you didn't mention. It was the Marantz CD-73. It had a front load design WITH a window on top to see the disc spinning!!
    I always love your videos, very entertaining and informative!

  • @skwergs
    @skwergs Před 2 lety +8

    Great review, as usual! … and I’ve been loving my P1200 since the late 80’… and it’s still going strong 😉

  • @oliverlison
    @oliverlison Před 2 lety +5

    I am always looking forward to watching a new episode of your content. Beautifully researched, filmed and narrated.... what else can be said? Simply said, one of the best channels out there!

  • @paranoidgenius9164
    @paranoidgenius9164 Před 2 lety +9

    Commodore adopted the top loading see through lid on the Amiga CD32 😊👍
    The amount of equipment that gets thrown out all because a belt has perished is astonishing! I've repaired many electronics that have been thrown out by others. Older equipment is built to last, & to know how to service them is a bonus. I just love having some equipment that you can repair yourself over & over throughout the years. I rescued a Sanyo G3003 with 2 VU meters & an orange digital display which is in remarkable condition for its age.

  • @Birdman_in_CLE
    @Birdman_in_CLE Před 2 lety

    I did a year in Canterbury at Christ Church College back in 1991. This is the exact unit we had in the radio studio I broadcast mornings on. We did most music from vinyl, and had this one CD player. I remember buying U2 Achtung Baby in the evening, listening to it three times that night at home making notes on my reactions, and then playing it track by track with my take on it the next morning. I got distracted at one point with calls and accidentally bumped the pitch up about half way. I played The Fly halfway before I could get back to listening to the audio and correcting it. I still have that show on cassette.

  • @zanyzoo6767
    @zanyzoo6767 Před 2 lety +3

    Im pleased to see you mention the cost of CD tech. It was a really expensive format at the time. People also forget that an average CD album at the time was between £14 and £18. If you take the middle price of £16 , today that would approx. be about £50 a throw.

  • @pez7031
    @pez7031 Před 2 lety +29

    Outstanding video! Love that you used “Paid In Full” to demo this player’s features. I could have a lot of fun with that pitch control on just about any of my 9,000 CDs.

    • @agatorabroad966
      @agatorabroad966 Před 2 lety +1

      What version of "Paid in Full" is this? All of the ones I can find on youtube don't have that really good hit at 27 seconds like his CD does!

    • @pez7031
      @pez7031 Před 2 lety +3

      @@agatorabroad966 The album is “Paid In Full” but song name is “I Know You Got Soul”. Techmoan was playing the regular album mix which is a match at 27 seconds in. The album itself is old skool legend!

  • @Daniel-79
    @Daniel-79 Před 2 lety +20

    Always nice to learn about hi-fi gear that I've never have seen or read about. Thanks for taking the time to procure and demonstrate such items.

  • @GentleGiantFan
    @GentleGiantFan Před 2 lety

    One of my best friends back in the day had a JVC 5 disc changer. You loaded the discs on top like you would a record on a turn table.
    It was pretty cool being able to watch the disc spin and, after the first disc finished playing, seeing the carousel rotate to the next disc.
    Cool video.

  • @telogic1
    @telogic1 Před 2 lety +1

    Still have my sl-p1200 after 30 years and still going strong. best unit ever

  • @everydaychris5597
    @everydaychris5597 Před 2 lety +12

    I’m so glad you brought this up (as of topics with all your wonderful content)! I have an ‘all in one’ Magnavox from my childhood that I still keep. It has a manual vertical pop-open CD player (loaded almost like a cassette), along with turntable ontop and dual cassette. Aside the digital readout for the radio, the physical formats are wonderful to watch!

  •  Před 2 lety +3

    I had a first contact with that machine in a night club. The DJ, who I knew since I also was a DJ, let me into the box and allowed me to play with it. Wow! The cueing wheel mesmerized me! I just could not believe that they had achieved that much functionality. It takes a bit of time to get used to it, but is very functional and effective. Thanks!

  • @joefunsmith
    @joefunsmith Před 2 lety +8

    I love all the great features. The model number is clearly an homage to the Technics SL1200 vinyl turntables with the pitch fader used by DJs to beat match their mixes.

  • @MrSoundman1955
    @MrSoundman1955 Před 2 lety

    I went to the Audio Engineering Society (AES) in 1980. This is a professional trade show for the broadcast and recording industry. Philips were showing the CD100. They had scratched and damaged discs to show off the error correction. It weighed over 20Kg and they were banging it and standing the whole machine on end. Of course it just carried on playing the disc.
    A second machine had the lid off. It was built like a brick outhouse. Cast aluminium chassis, massive power supply and all. Most impressive though was the stunning amount of stacked up circuit boards. Many of the special integrated circuits had yet to be made. It was rammed with discrete components.
    It wasn't long before CD players shrunk - by Sony probably - into the same silver and teak of all the other Hi Fi Units.
    The sliding drawer was a work of art and the circuitry was now all on one board. The ability to randomly select tracks and change the order were fantastic after all that cassette tape winding. It all soon became commonplace and quite rightly really. It was the music on the disc that was important.
    I've had quite a few broadcast CD players since - most were rack mount - and all the buttons were on the remote.
    It's good to see an early 80's machine with all the controls on top. Many thanks Matt for all your top quality tubes.

  • @3991justin
    @3991justin Před 2 lety +4

    Great video! I recently went on a bit of a CD player quest, and I wanted to share what I learned with all of you.
    Modern hifi CD players are quite expensive, so you may want to scour the vintage market. I ended up finding a Pioneer disc changer from the '90s for around $30 and it worked, but it was noisy and beaten up due to age. I wondered why there weren't many standalone CD players from the 2000s available, and I finally realized that it's because they were displaced by DVD players.
    The irony is you can find a boatload of DVD players being liquidated at stores like Goodwill, and some of them are officially labeled as DVD/CD players while costing less than the older CD-only units.
    Some of them have onboard DACs with impressive oversampling. I inherited one with a 192khz / 24 bit converter. You may even locate a model that supports HDCD, and don't forget that some Blu-ray players support Super Audio discs, if that's what you're into. DVD players almost always can be used as transports if you have your own DAC, or you can just use the RCA outputs without any ill effect, as a lack of television shouldn't affect operation.
    Design-wise they're a refreshing departure from black boxes as they tend to be thin and silvery, with the basic CD control buttons usually in easy reach on the front of the unit.
    In short, anyone considering a brand new $400 CD player should really look into the used DVD player market, or just dig out your old one. Panasonic, Pioneer and other companies made some models that sound amazing and were purpose built to be used as CD players, and of course you'd be getting a video player as well so DVD audio and video is never off limits!
    Techmoan, I think this topic would make a great video. I'd love to learn more about how early DVD players catered to the hifi market as all-in-one machines.

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse Před 2 lety +3

    Ahh, I'm reminded many, many moons ago when my older brother brought a gigantic AKAI component HiFi. It looked to have come right out of Hotblack Desiato's star ship, and if there was a 'bell' or 'whistle' it had it. I think the thing cost him about three months salary, and was certainly top of the line consumer grade equipment. You could almost hear it quietly singing "Feed me!" as it sat in the corner of his living room, even when turned off.
    All the various formats it could play (it didn't have reel-to-reel, tusk, tusk) were indeed hanging out for all to see as they played - lovely!

  • @helgenx
    @helgenx Před 2 lety +6

    This is the dopest CD player I've ever seen in my life. I'd love to have one.

  • @bobbobson4069
    @bobbobson4069 Před 2 lety +5

    This was a great documentary by TechMoan! Pure class! TechMoan's videos are a highlight to my week. I appreciate the attention to history and detail. For example, I never knew that the Sony protype actually showed the spinning cd horizontally. Those early models really looked beautiful. Best wishes, Marius from Warsaw.

  • @tomruffner6283
    @tomruffner6283 Před 2 lety +9

    Outstanding episode. It is wonderful when you feature ultra-interesting stereo components! Thank you.

  • @manjacovus5342
    @manjacovus5342 Před 2 lety +5

    I don't know why you call it techMOAN: your obvious delight in the products, your massive expertise and superb presentation are totally infectious.
    I often watch even when I have no special interest in the particular item(s) under review as I rarely fail to learn something new or be entertained in the process.
    Keep up the fab work. Thanks.

  • @ricog8209
    @ricog8209 Před 2 lety +21

    You caught my attention at "Technics". I've always loved technics. I'm currently using a twenty +year amplifier and it still sounds fab. I absolutely love their multistage noise shaping (MASH) system on their CD players. Everything sounds so clear, almost like a highend cd player. Technics is highly underated.

    • @richardwhite2344
      @richardwhite2344 Před rokem +1

      Yes it is!!!! I am a big fan of Technics and I would never buy anything else. Technics is the Science of Sound and the brand did not get the respect it deserved.

  • @jpaleas
    @jpaleas Před 2 lety +22

    I remember the excitement looking at all the electronics back in the eighties as a teenager , unfortunately a feeling that’s lost when I look at electronics that are made today.....
    Thankfully some companies are still making some electronics and speakers that have a vintage look like Yamaha, klipsch , JBL, Warfedale... just to name a few!

    • @guruoo
      @guruoo Před 2 lety +2

      Deja vu, vintage is back. Now go thank a boomer.

    • @euroyen420
      @euroyen420 Před 2 lety +1

      Don't thank a boomer, it will inflate their already fragile, (built by fake media) ego.

    • @guruoo
      @guruoo Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@euroyen420 So, from whom do you think most of this vintage stuff originated? You really should show more respect for your elders, son. ROTFL!

    • @euroyen420
      @euroyen420 Před 2 lety +1

      They're from japan..nothing to do with American boomers.

    • @shinji5217
      @shinji5217 Před 2 lety

      @@guruoo boomers are just yanks. And even then, they are the hippie ones, so it is a matter of age, not intelect anyway, would you believe, people had different groups back then too.

  • @lucacoccioli9244
    @lucacoccioli9244 Před 2 lety +3

    I've been waiting for this video for a really long time. I often look to this channel for inspiration when buying vintage equipment, but I've always dreaded adding a CD player to my setup as most players just wouldn't really fit in with everything else. Which is a huge shame as CD's can be just as special and quirky as cassettes for instance, and a lot of my favourite music only ever came out on CD. Thanks for a wonderful channel.

  • @stevejordan7275
    @stevejordan7275 Před 2 lety +1

    When my wife was working at a radio station that was about to move to a new location, I had the chance to lug one of these home.
    The pitch control didn't have enough range, and I could do it in post, so I didn't take it. :-C
    Well, in fairness, we WERE living in a tiny flat at the time.
    "Thanks," Matt. Now I have another regret to live with.

  • @winhtin3420
    @winhtin3420 Před 2 lety +7

    Never occurred to me that I needed to see the CD spinning and get excited. Interesting thought for sure. I guess it has more to do with space saving and being stackable as you mentioned. Perhaps spinning the CD vertically creates more wobble also. As a side note, Esoteric X-05 has a little window at the top if I recollect.

  • @wal
    @wal Před 2 lety +234

    I completely agree about seeing the disc's. I reviewed a junky Emerson 3 disc stereo not too long ago and although it's junk, still looks beyond cool with the motorized door and open design. Why do they hide these cool looking discs? Makes no sense!

    • @sw6188
      @sw6188 Před 2 lety +10

      Seeing the disc's what?

    • @sw6188
      @sw6188 Před 2 lety +3

      @@nintendude794 I know. I was making that point without being specific.

    • @neondemon5137
      @neondemon5137 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Stevie-J Are you lost? Do I need to call your mummy?

    • @themaritimegirl
      @themaritimegirl Před 2 lety +7

      @@Stevie-J wtf is wrong with you?

    • @stylis666
      @stylis666 Před 2 lety +4

      _" Why do they hide these cool looking discs? Makes no sense!"_
      Why were you able to see inside a tape? To see the progress and what's left. On many tapes it was even etched into the plastic. If you see a CD turning, you see a CD turning, it's absolutely useless, so it makes no sense to show it. Here, just for you, to show movement: **flips bird**

  • @povilasstaniulis9484
    @povilasstaniulis9484 Před 2 lety +6

    When we switched from cassettes to CDs, I always hated the fact that the discs were hidden.
    I still have an old CD-ROM drive (with integrated audio CD controls) which I modified to work without the top cover so I could see the disc. I still power it up from time to time to listed to something from my old collection.

    • @CheezeCracker
      @CheezeCracker Před 2 lety

      Whoa. Thx for the flash back! I remember wanting to mod my external burner with a clear top lid.

  • @knowknaime
    @knowknaime Před 2 lety +2

    Great video! You should look at the Technics SL-DZ1200, it’s a direct drive “digital turntable” that has a number of similar features with a turntable aesthetic. I use it as a regular home CD player, but have also enjoyed it in my home studio as well.

  • @mikedominico7326
    @mikedominico7326 Před rokem

    I really like your videos and being an audio guy always find them interesting. I just stumbled onto this video and have some additional perspective you may find interesting. Firstly, I'm a lifelong career club DJ in New York City and was in the clubs when these SL-P1200s were first introduced. Interestingly they were built to the same dimensions as Technics' SL-1200mkII turntables, which had been the industry standard for quite some time. In big dance clubs the DJ consoles often had special cutouts for the turntables to be suspended on platforms by thick rubber bands to eliminated any vibration and feedback from the clubs' heavy sound systems. The thought of making the SL-P1200's base to the same specifications as the SL-1200mkII was so that clubs interested in switching from vinyl to cd could simply pull out the turntable and drop the cd player in it's place. Unfortunately (or fortunately) clubs were not interested in completely abandoning vinyl and would often have one or two of these cd players off to the side. I always felt Technics never really took the idea of club DJs using cds seriously as for our purposes these players were not great and never followed up with an improvement. Pioneer had their first DJ cd player out, the CDJ-500, and though not as sturdy as Technics', Pioneer's functionality was far superior. For instance, one of the biggest oversights Technics made was that the pitch control on their cd players was opposite from what it was on the turntables, which means all DJs would have to get accustomed to doing the reverse of what they had been doing for years when beat mixing... really stupid mistake. Technics should've jumped on it and owned the market as they had with the turntables but they left the door wide open for Pioneer to come and take it from the beginning, which they still have now close to 30 years later. Anyway, thanks for another informative walk down memory lane.

  • @shelby3822
    @shelby3822 Před 2 lety +3

    Lovely bit of kit!
    I never understood how out of all possible options, Intro Scan was deemed so important as to include in practically every device 🤷‍♂️

  • @iss05e
    @iss05e Před 2 lety +3

    Another excellent informative presentation! Appreciate the amount of work that went into this one.

  • @nickknight5543
    @nickknight5543 Před rokem +20

    CD and DVD players never lost their cool.

    • @mentalkidgaming357
      @mentalkidgaming357 Před rokem +1

      DVD players definitely have now that we have 4K Blu Ray players which are backwards compatible

    • @audioupgrades
      @audioupgrades Před rokem +1

      @@mentalkidgaming357 If you own a lot of DVDs, you'll probably be better off with a DVD player. They're faster and often have dedicated circuits to ensure optimal image and sound playback from a dvd.

    • @mentalkidgaming357
      @mentalkidgaming357 Před rokem +1

      @@audioupgrades youre really trying to tell me that a 4K blu ray player outputs worse image than a DVD player???

    • @irixperson
      @irixperson Před rokem +1

      ​@@mentalkidgaming357 A cheap Blu-ray player will probably have a worse output than a high end DVD player and vice versa.

    • @David-uf8ex
      @David-uf8ex Před rokem

      Never knew that had any cool lol

  • @robbja
    @robbja Před 2 lety +45

    Thank you Matt! For this unbridled, uninhibited - loving display of gadget enthusiasm! THIS IS Infotainment - Entertaining and inspiring information!
    I thoroughly enjoy your enthusiasm and attention to detail!
    Bloody well done sir!
    Cheers mate!

  • @2011joser
    @2011joser Před 2 lety +14

    I remember in the late 80’s to the 90’s Technics being the best home cd players the average consumer could purchase. I owned several with a carousel 5 cd player being my last one. For cd players it was Technics in the home, Sony walkman on the go, and Alpine in the car.

    • @handlesarefeckinstupid
      @handlesarefeckinstupid Před 2 lety

      Technics were never the best. They had a look and hype, but they were never the best. The really clever people bought Marantz and other names. Technics lived off the deck name.

    • @Clay3613
      @Clay3613 Před 2 lety

      @@handlesarefeckinstupid McIntosh, for true audiophiles.

  • @1974UTuber
    @1974UTuber Před 2 lety +5

    Matt you still manage to surprise me after all these years with something I've never seen before.
    Having worked as a DJ for many years I had assumed Radio Stations would have used the same type of Twin Deck CD players I used in a rack case system.
    Im sure some did has they had a separate control panel that would have made life easier for them to que, beat and pitch match 2 CDs at once.
    The Technics has a really impressive spin up time though

  • @ebreckpo6563
    @ebreckpo6563 Před 2 lety +2

    Used to have several of those. It is a miracle you have a working sample. Ours were in a constant repair rotation. They were indeed build like a tank but extremely temperamental.

  • @MarcelHuguenin
    @MarcelHuguenin Před 2 lety

    Passionate tribute to a beautiful piece of equipment. I remember having used a Technics front loader CD player class AA (forgot the model number) that had very similar options, including the jog-shuttle play, as this machine. Nice video!

  • @syrophenikan
    @syrophenikan Před 2 lety +23

    I had its cousin, the SLP-1000. A beautiful piece of gear with everything that has except the pitch control. It’s one of the few pieces of gear I wish I still had. The laser died in mine. R.I.P.

  • @UndoomedOne
    @UndoomedOne Před 2 lety +144

    You should check out the Bang & Olufsen Beosound 9000.Probably the most beautiful CD player ever made.

    • @radarmusen
      @radarmusen Před 2 lety +19

      100% agree, B&O made several CD players with “windows” , I guess what they was thinking about the user has to see the cd. The 9000 even stop the cd in the right position.

    • @RafaelHabegger
      @RafaelHabegger Před 2 lety +16

      it's not

    • @alanguile8945
      @alanguile8945 Před 2 lety +4

      @@RafaelHabegger TIS

    • @force311999
      @force311999 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Shibathedog they still sell them but they are all junk and dont last

    • @RafaelHabegger
      @RafaelHabegger Před 2 lety +2

      @@alanguile8945 meh. Boomer design lacking the essentials imho. Tell somebody who doesn't know the device to open the glasscover and see what happens.

  • @michaelblake8837
    @michaelblake8837 Před 2 lety +1

    Terrific video sir. I had one of these up until it started to not spin up the disc when the lid was closed. Had it repaired and all was well again until something else failed. I wasn't too surprised though, these players probably had a LOT of hard use and for something that was over 30 years old it's understandable.
    Great review Matt, it's what you excel at.

  • @alcamenes
    @alcamenes Před 2 lety

    I immediately thought of the bridge before the second verse of the song "American Music" as soon as you mentioned the kinetic performance aspect: "I sit and watch my world go round and round and round. I sit and watch my world go 'round..." It's from an Ian Hunter and Mick Ronson album from the early 90s. You can probably find it somewhere on CZcams if you want to have a listen. I've only ever owned it on CD, but I've always imagined in my head a vinyl record spinning on a turntable every time I listen to it.

  • @davebittner822
    @davebittner822 Před 2 lety +7

    The first-generation CD player I owned was the Magnavox FD1041BK, which had a transparent front window on the CD drawer and a green LED that illuminated the top surface of the spinning CD. Seems the market dominance of Sony quickly put visible disks out of fashion. Thanks for the memories!

  • @EdgardoDC
    @EdgardoDC Před 2 lety +12

    When I was a kid in the late 90s I used to look at the cassette being played from begging to end, but with the CD it didn't make sense because I couldn't see the progress, I just see it moving. One thing I did notice was that, on the last track, the disc was rotating slower than the start. I always had boomboxes with clear CD covers to play them because all the expensive equipment was reserved for my parents, they knew I'd destroy them 😅 But looking at the media being played is a mesmerizing show that's part of the experience of playing physical media ✨

    • @renemunkthalund3581
      @renemunkthalund3581 Před 2 lety +1

      Well observed on the rotation speed. CDs store an equal amount of data pr. groove length, and having the first track near the center it needs to spin faster to cover the same groovelength pr. time unit.

    • @KristopherNoronha
      @KristopherNoronha Před 2 lety +1

      @@renemunkthalund3581 the technical name for that is CLV (constant linear velocity) - the other speed standard is CAV (constant angular velocity) that most computer CD drives used.

    • @renemunkthalund3581
      @renemunkthalund3581 Před 2 lety

      @@KristopherNoronha I know. Not sure on the last bit though. CD-roms physically store data the same way as an audio-cds so CAV would mean a higher data read rate for data near the edge. Definitely CAV are floppy drives and, of course, vinyl records.

  • @reghunt2487
    @reghunt2487 Před 2 lety

    Nice overview of the SL-P1200. Note that there was a safety concern with CD players having their lasers exposed. The drawer loading addressed that. I worked for some radio stations and recordings studios doing maintenance on the SL-P1200's, and one of the main things was replacing the door switch parts, as they tended to wear down. The switch prevented the player from operating (i.e. turning on the laser) while the door was open.; So of the switch was broken, the player was disabled. So we kept a stock of the switch parts around at all times.

  • @Huffy1001
    @Huffy1001 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the great review Techmoan👍🏻

  • @theNWdigital
    @theNWdigital Před 2 lety +12

    Wow never knew that a device like this ever came to market! Congrats to this unit and thanks for presenting. Amazing how fast it reads the TOC. Not an optic-only phony but a technically sophisticated machine! (Ok, I think Technics did have something to lose ...)

    • @4879daniel
      @4879daniel Před 2 lety +2

      My Pioneer stable platter player also reads the TOC within 2 seconds.

  • @pdrg
    @pdrg Před 2 lety +3

    Lovely machine! I love the broadcast features, so evocative, and from a time where most DJ work was a stack of vinyl and carts.

  • @robertdavis5714
    @robertdavis5714 Před rokem +5

    Always enjoy seeing something I never knew existed, especially when I like it. 61 yrs young and I do not believe this type ever made it to the States because would have bought one back then.

  • @JulesFox
    @JulesFox Před 2 lety +1

    That looks sensational and is definitely 'shoots Death Star lasers' worthy. You really set this episode up well Matt.

  • @pierrebridet
    @pierrebridet Před 2 lety +8

    Great video as always ! I'd never seen a CD player with pitch control. As a guitarist who loves to play along some of my favorite records, this would be an extremely useful feature because sometimes, especially on older records, the instruments aren't tuned to the "standard" 440hz A. For example on Radiohead's The Bends album, all songs are in regular 440hz tuning, except the last (and brillant) song Street Spirit. Growing up and learning guitar, I was never able to play along the record for this reason (at least not without the fuss of having to slightly detune my guitar specifically for this one song). Of course now it's easy to fix with a computer but I find it very exciting to be able to do it directly on device in the living room !

    • @VintageTexas59
      @VintageTexas59 Před 2 lety +2

      Denon made small CD-players with both "scratch" mode and pitch-control, very dependable and sounds great Pierre.

  • @rich_edwards79
    @rich_edwards79 Před 2 lety +5

    A handsome beast indeed. Love the brushed metal keys and Darth Vader styling.
    I think another reason for the lack of interest in standalone CD decks is that there are now a lot of other items that can play CDs, which people are way more likely to still have in their homes than a full component Hifi setup. Everything from DVD / Blu-ray players to PlayStations, optical drives in older laptops and micro systems (some of which did go back to the top-loading mechanisms with visible disc) can read a CD. My partner plays her old ELO and ABBA discs on a 19" Goodmans kitchen TV with built in DVD drive. No it doesn't sound anywhere near as good as a proper dedicated separates system, but we'd have difficulty fitting one of those into a galley kitchen.

    • @stompchomper6411
      @stompchomper6411 Před 2 lety +2

      These days your best bet is something like a Sony 4k bluray player. We bought one for other reasons and found it has digital coax output, a toslink out, and hdmi audio to boot. Even advertised as able to play the largely snake oil SA-CD format. We hooked it upto our amp and despite my distaste for Sony, it does perform well. Our old dedicated CD player (some TEAC unit my parents bought in the 90's) sounds more or less the same to my ear. (Edit: spell check)

  • @kevinmcfarlane2351
    @kevinmcfarlane2351 Před 2 lety

    Nailed it. Seeing the movement is everything. Excellent video!

  • @AdvancedLiving
    @AdvancedLiving Před 2 lety

    I was a DJ at the DNA Lounge in San Francisco in 1990. This episode almost had me in tears. Those were the days. We had 2 of these.

  • @niclaskarlin
    @niclaskarlin Před 2 lety +3

    7:20 Thanks for the currency conversion to Fiji dollar, saved me to have to look it up.