World's FIRST CD Player - The Sony CDP-101 from 1982!

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 388

  • @hi-fihaven2257
    @hi-fihaven2257 Před 4 lety +90

    Man that thing looks brand new. This was my first cd player. Used it for about twenty years. Have a great day!

    • @dr.nizamsarkawi-personal7101
      @dr.nizamsarkawi-personal7101 Před 3 lety +2

      @Hi-Fi Haven Welcome to the club. The sound is superb!

    • @dilbyjones
      @dilbyjones Před 2 lety +2

      Yep, what a beauty.

    • @ARDG89
      @ARDG89 Před 9 měsíci +1

      can you tell me anything about the quality for your past 20 years?? did you run into any type of problems?

    • @jimwood1584
      @jimwood1584 Před 5 měsíci

      I still have my Sony CDP707ESD player in my system purchased in 1988

  • @jb.2986
    @jb.2986 Před 2 lety +25

    Man I remember someone in college being the first in our fraternity to have this CD player. As cassette tape player audiophiles , we were so envious always going to his room to listen.

  • @bubblegumgun3292
    @bubblegumgun3292 Před 3 lety +7

    80s hi-fi tech is just so .... Class

  • @jonathanlake6053
    @jonathanlake6053 Před 3 lety +24

    I brought one in 1982, and still have it, the laser packed up after the first year of ownership and was replaced by Sony. I did get it out of the box a couple of years ago and it was still working. It has a 'battleship build' quality to it.

  • @Andersljungberg
    @Andersljungberg Před 3 lety +20

    changing song in a second in 1982 was probably revolutionary or cool

    • @charlie_nolan
      @charlie_nolan Před 3 lety +3

      You could do that with 8-track tape or open reel, although it usually wasn’t right at the start of the song

  • @mcndev21
    @mcndev21 Před 3 lety +10

    This is the first CD player I ever heard, I went with my parents to hear a demo of this unit at Marvin Electronics in Fort Worth, TX. That was March 1983 I think, come Christmas that year my Dad bought a Yamaha CD-1 instead.

  • @gelmann2
    @gelmann2 Před 11 měsíci +9

    I walked into my local stereo shop - The first CD players were $1,000

  • @ernstoud
    @ernstoud Před 3 lety +31

    Jointly developed with Philips who at the same time introduced the CD100. Credit is due to both manufacturers, although for some reason Americans firmly believe that Sony invented the CD technology, most of it came from the Dr. Neher Lab of Philips in The Netherlands.

    • @crooner2007
      @crooner2007 Před 3 lety +2

      Actually laserdisc and CD technology were conceived in the United States and then further developed by Philips in Holland.

    • @batman.darthmaul
      @batman.darthmaul Před 2 lety +1

      I always knew that Phillips and Sony co-developed the technology. I also thought that Phillips had the first player, but I guess they were simultaneous with Sony.

  • @garfieldsmith332
    @garfieldsmith332 Před 3 lety +4

    Still have my Sony CD player from 1987. Still works.

  • @johndavies6253
    @johndavies6253 Před rokem +4

    It’s a Sony time machine, I love it! Thanks for sharing. $700 back in 1983 was serious money!

  • @JimGrey
    @JimGrey Před 3 lety +11

    I started engineering school in the fall of 1985. This was in Terre Haute Indiana, where one of the first CD pressing plants was built. I was told that the plant donated one of this very CD player to every radio station in town, including the one on the campus of my engineering school. I was a disc jockey at that station all four years. The Sony CD player served us well for a couple of years but the button to open the drawer kept failing. We repaired it over and over but finally gave up and bought two new CD players to replace it.

  • @brynybach7741
    @brynybach7741 Před 3 lety +16

    I bought mine in 1982 with the whole stack system package consisting of record turntable, radio tuner and amp. As someone mentioned earlier, it came with a disc but for some reason I had two of them in my box. I still have everything and only recently had the CD unit serviced as the tray stopped opening. The grease they used in those days had hardened solid! It's all back and working and still sounds fantastic when you think how old it is. I have a more modern set up now but just can't see myself to letting the old thing go. Because it was always kept in a enclosed rack system with a glass front door, it's still in mint condition. To buy a CD when they eventually started to come out used to cost me £14, nearly a third of my weeks salary at the time. Forty years on I get a lot of my CDs now from charity shops and pay just 50p to £1 and still collecting. 😁

  • @Warpedsmac
    @Warpedsmac Před měsícem +1

    I have an early Kenwood CD player...also has a "hot" output. So high we had to make a "pad" rca lead to bring the level down a few millivolts. I went inside it and found output level could be adjusted...but even at minimum it was still too high! Cheers from Australia. GREAT YT CHANNEL

  • @bukeksiansu2112
    @bukeksiansu2112 Před 3 lety +30

    Nothing can beat 80-90s audio hi-fi stuff

    • @mcplutt
      @mcplutt Před 3 lety +2

      Most stuff after 2000 can beat it.

    • @cianleonizoabad
      @cianleonizoabad Před 3 lety +7

      @@mcplutt Like?

    • @williammanganaro9070
      @williammanganaro9070 Před 3 lety +2

      From a nostalgic and robustness point of view, I agree, but audio reproduction has made many improvements over the years. I love the new and old but my Technics SA-500 can't compare to my Onkyo integrated amplifier in terms of distortion and signal to noise ratio, etc.

    • @elgringoec
      @elgringoec Před 3 lety +1

      Except the good modern stuff. 😬

    • @UrielX1212
      @UrielX1212 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mcplutt Name me one tape deck made after 2000 that is better than anything made in the 80s and 90s. Receivers also went down in quality.

  • @GustoTheGamer
    @GustoTheGamer Před 3 lety +12

    IT would be awesome if Sony Re-releasing this model! 40 years anniversary model 😎

  • @Andersljungberg
    @Andersljungberg Před 3 lety +12

    It may be that we have a different view of plastic today than we had in 1982

    • @Trance88
      @Trance88 Před 3 lety +1

      Right. I think Plastic gives it a more "futuristic" look.

    • @stickyfox
      @stickyfox Před 3 lety +1

      @@Trance88 Plastic manufacturing has come a very long way since then, too.

  • @swinde
    @swinde Před 3 lety +3

    I bought a Sony CDP-302 in 1985 for $400. It uses a linear rail motor to move the laser carriage. Tracks play instantly. I have had to lubricate the tray rails a couple of times bur it still works great.

  • @AmazingChinaToday
    @AmazingChinaToday Před rokem +1

    Absolutely fascinating! This is one of the coolest audio / HiFi channels!

  • @phrtao
    @phrtao Před 3 lety +1

    This brings back many happy memories. My first CD player was a leter model but it had the same function set and the exact same display. I spent many nights in the low light of my student bedroom looking at that display as i listened to music.

  • @annakessler9372
    @annakessler9372 Před 3 lety +2

    this thign was mde before i was born and it still looks modern! I remember when we had Made in Japan things.. All about quality and technology and nice colours

  • @TheBudgie29
    @TheBudgie29 Před 3 lety +15

    In the UK the Philips CD100 was the first, You even got a disc to play on It, as there were none around to buy. It was "Now That's What I Call Music 4" a single disc exclusive to the CD100.

    • @captaincrunch5201
      @captaincrunch5201 Před 3 lety +1

      Had one of these, wasn't it a 14 bit design? Turned out that moving to 16 bit version later did not help the sound quality much. Frankly from the get-go I could not get the same audio feel from CDs that vinyl had, but being techie I assumed CDs would eventually produce real hifi. It sort of did in the end but only with a dedicated outboard DAC in my case. For some weird reason I'm finding high bitrate MP3 or AAC more satisfying than CDs were.
      While on the topic, some of my mates had budget integrated CD players that used a single channel DAC to decode L and R channels. If you switched to mono the treble would slush out due to phasing problems.

    • @TheBudgie29
      @TheBudgie29 Před 3 lety

      @@captaincrunch5201 Compressed Red Book CD's, And now modern Brickwalled ones are even worse, says It all. I'll stick with playing Vinyl.

  • @thomosburn8740
    @thomosburn8740 Před rokem +3

    "reset" is the STOP button!

  • @ConsumerDV
    @ConsumerDV Před 3 lety +26

    Anti-shock would be the most interesting part, and you skipped over it as if it were nothing. Electronic anti-skip buffers appeared on portable players only a decade later, at least they were heavily advertised at that time, so what would constitute a 1983 anti-shock system? Without re-compressing to a lossy format, one second of PCM takes 176 KB, which is peanuts today, but the first IBM PC came out with 16 KB RAM (!), costing $1.5K. Its maximum addressable memory was 1 MB and no one thought that a personal computer would ever need more memory. So, 176 KB at that time was huge, and this is just one second. Three second buffer would be half a megabyte!

    • @benjib2691
      @benjib2691 Před 3 lety +4

      That's probably one of the reason why this unit was kind of pricey. 528k of memory, it's much more than 95% of the RAM amount available in computers of the area

    • @FriedChairs
      @FriedChairs Před 3 lety

      That makes it seem like a big mistake to include it in this machine. They could have reduced the price and likely no one would have missed the anti-shock feature.

    • @ianknight9589
      @ianknight9589 Před 3 lety +8

      This machine had no such thing I can assure you of that being an Ex-Sony Engineer that used to repair these. The anti-shock switch connected to the base of Transistor 307 and would ground it, this in turn would add extra current to the tracking servo (or not depending on position of the switch) so vibrations from the environment would not cause it to skip as the servos could use more current and thus would be stronger and resist vibrations, but this feature would actually cause discs that were damaged to skip and that's why the switch was fitted. The unit had 16k of ram built inside the decoder chip in IC501 to decode the disc data before being passed to the A/D chip. Electronic skip protection you talk about did not appear until the mid 90's and was around 3 seconds as the ram was so expensive along with supporting circuitry. Back in 1982 when this CD was brought out it would have been almost impossible to build such a thing without it costing a few years wages as the supporting electronics needed back then to go with the RAM would have been a lot. Back in 1982 the Sinclair ZX Spectrum home computer had 48k of RAM but actually had 64k of RAM all for £175 so about $230 in US money but would not have been fast enough to buffer music.

    • @benjib2691
      @benjib2691 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ianknight9589 That's interesting, thank you for your answer! As for the skipping you mention when the CD is damaged, is it because of the fact that the servo takes the scratch for a strong vibration and deviates to compensate so much that it ends up in the adjacent track? I'm a student in Electronic and Computer engineering (in low-level programming, electronics and in IC making through HDL), so it interests me quite a lot. I love to know how things were done in the past, how the engineers were dealing with the limitations back then.

    • @ianknight9589
      @ianknight9589 Před 3 lety +3

      @@benjib2691 Keep up the good work. I think there was a few reasons why it would skip, mainly because it was then slow to react with extra current going through the coils when it needed to react quickly this would cause it to jump onto the next track where it would just align itself onto that track and carry on. As with all CD players they were basic as in the laser would hit the disc and be reflected back to 6 diodes, 4 grouped together into a square (A to D diodes) to read the data and focus and two other diodes one each side of the square for the tracking (E & F diodes) the data would be read off the disc and sent through the IC's and straight into the A/D convertor. It used Reed Solomon code for error correction but this was basic to correct the data being read off so the music was good and could handle small damage or scratches in certain directions (Scratches that weren't circular around the disc) but didn't check for time codes or where it was on the disc and thus it didn't actually know it had jumped a track. So although the anti skip feature was good if you were playing loud music or using it at a party with good discs it caused issues with damaged discs where it was slower to respond. The early players mean't we had to align the laser using an oscilloscope to get the tracking, focus and amplitude spot on, I was glad when the KSS-210 laser came along where is set itself up LOL and no need for manual calibration.

  • @hificomics
    @hificomics Před 4 lety +3

    I have a Harman Kardon HD500 cd player that also has no stop button and I learned that if you hold the pause button for a couple seconds that performs the "stop" function.

  • @crooner2007
    @crooner2007 Před 4 lety +5

    Nice unit! One thing this player has that I have never seen in others is the relay/solenoid driven touch plate controls. Pretty cool back in the day and probably expensive to implement!
    By the way, Sony was still producing top notch CD players in the 1990's. My current player is a CDP-XA7ES in champagne finish with all copper chassis, which retailed for $3000 in the mid to late 1990s..

  • @MichaelBeeny
    @MichaelBeeny Před 3 lety +5

    I remember waiting for the Sony shop to open on the first day of selling this player, very expensive at the time but I really wanted one.
    Sadly after 1 month it developed a fault, went back to Sony for repair, took 1 month to return. I cannot remember what the fault was but a large IC was replaced. The same fault happened again about 4 weeks later, same fault. This time the IC was replaced by a completely different one. It remained fault free, sold it 8 years later still in mint condition.
    I don't recall mine making so much noise on CD removal.

  • @stevenburke1728
    @stevenburke1728 Před 3 lety +2

    I favor the older CDP's with the TDA 1541 DAC chips. They sound so sweet!

    • @KylesDigitalLab
      @KylesDigitalLab Před 2 lety

      I don't think any Sony CD players ever had the TDA1541, Philips developed that DAC. The CDP-101 has a CX20017 DAC if I remember, that was made by Sony.

  • @arthurkravtsovchannel
    @arthurkravtsovchannel Před 3 lety +8

    Even today, its design looks amazing!

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra Před 3 lety +3

      My exact thoughts, really sleek, not that dated for a nearly 40-year device.

    • @themadmattster9647
      @themadmattster9647 Před měsícem

      Classic Sony is the best

  • @ScottGrammer
    @ScottGrammer Před 3 lety +3

    Hadn't heard the thing about the 101 meaning a five out of ten. When I went to Sony Tech School in Atlanta in the late 80's, I was told by a Sony tech that the "101" corresponded to the release date of October 1 here in America.

  • @Shatamx
    @Shatamx Před rokem +1

    Man growing up you never noticed the clamping setting the disc. Just it was slow. Damn 90’s kids were so impatient.

  • @casperguylkn
    @casperguylkn Před 3 lety +1

    Really cool. Simple. Uncomplicated. They put out a warmer sound versus the much later models.

  • @flyingjeff1984
    @flyingjeff1984 Před 3 lety +2

    I was an early adopter. Cost me a month's pay. I think my first CD was Paul McCartney and Wings followed by Jackson Browne. I was obsessed with digital tech. Even had a Commodore computer with a cassette deck for storage.

  • @straightpipediesel
    @straightpipediesel Před 3 lety +3

    The accessory connector output the CD subcodes. There was a short time window where you could get an external CD+G decoder for karaoke that would plug in (Sony CDG-3000, c. 1986), before they became integrated.

  • @BilisNegra
    @BilisNegra Před 3 lety +14

    The aesthetics of this early Sony model look so much more modern to me than those of the Philips CD-100. While the Philips reminds me more of an early Laserdisc from the late '70s, toploader with no VCF display but just two rows of leds, the Sony design would not be out of place in the late '80s if the CD had been introduced at that time.

  • @uglypers
    @uglypers Před 3 lety +3

    I saw a Sony model three years newer at a thrift store recently. I was tempted to get it but my adult conscious told me I have no use for it. It was pretty handsome though, I love the look of Sony's old equipment.

    • @digidrum2003
      @digidrum2003 Před 2 lety

      Darn adult conscious...kept me from obtaining many audio electronics....hee hee hee.

  • @raulzavala9061
    @raulzavala9061 Před 3 lety +2

    In '85 my parents got a brand new sterero for the living room, it had a turntable, dual audio cassette deck and CD player, my parents probably rewired the plugs in wrong as they never got the CD to work.

  • @jeanbonnefoy1377
    @jeanbonnefoy1377 Před 3 lety +2

    About the anti-shock device: i had several decks and portable cd players form this time (Sony, Philips and Technics to name a few) and this anti-shock system was, as far as I can remember, a BBD circuit inserted in the playback line allowing to buffer up to 5sec of signal as a sort of digital shock absorber. The drawback being that due to the technology used (the same as on solid state echo or reverb pedals of the late 70s) it tended to deteriorate the S/N ratio and the bandwith in high frequencies.

    • @ianknight9589
      @ianknight9589 Před 3 lety

      This machine had no such thing I can assure you of that being an Ex-Sony Engineer that used to repair these. The anti-shock switch connected to the base of Transistor 307 and would ground it, this in turn would add extra current to the tracking servo (or not depending on position of the switch) so vibrations from the environment would not cause it to skip as the servos could use more current and thus would be stronger and resist vibrations, but this feature would actually cause discs that were damaged to skip and that's why the switch was fitted. The unit had 16k of ram built inside the decoder chip in IC501 to decode the disc data before being passed to the A/D chip. Electronic skip protection you talk about did not appear until the mid 90's and was around 3 seconds as the ram was so expensive along with supporting circuitry. Back in 1982 when this CD was brought out it would have been almost impossible to build such a thing without it costing a few years wages as the supporting electronics needed back then to go with the RAM would have been a lot.

  • @mastluob2554
    @mastluob2554 Před 2 lety +1

    Great review !
    Very professionally explained

  • @aus80srockradio94
    @aus80srockradio94 Před 4 lety +7

    Interesting to note - where's the STOP button! I have looked and admired these things for years as they are a very important first step in the world of hi-fi - but there's no STOP!!!

    • @SkyFiAudio
      @SkyFiAudio  Před 3 lety +4

      LOL right? They figured you would never "stop" listening!

    • @aus80srockradio94
      @aus80srockradio94 Před 3 lety

      @@SkyFiAudio Yes that must have been it! My first CD player was a 1986 D-50 Mk2 Discman - and it had a stop button, they must have figured it out by then 😏

    • @arnolddill
      @arnolddill Před 3 lety +3

      It’s the button top left marked RESET.

    • @aus80srockradio94
      @aus80srockradio94 Před 3 lety

      @@arnolddill Cool, thanks for the info.

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra Před 3 lety

      @@arnolddill Thank you, I kind of assumed there had to be a way, several presses of a key, key combination or something like that, but I'm glad you cleared that out.

  • @simonhodgetts6530
    @simonhodgetts6530 Před 3 lety +1

    I couldn’t run to one of these - they’re very collectible now. Instead I bought my second Marantz CD-54, which is a late first gen CD player, using the very desirable Phillips CDM-01 cast metal transport. I had one back in the 80s, and always liked the sound, and the ‘battleship’ build quality, and I still enjoy it immensely now.

  • @terrystroud200
    @terrystroud200 Před 3 lety

    Never owned one of these.Bought A Pioneer in late '85.loved these things ever since.lol!!

  • @djhrecordhound4391
    @djhrecordhound4391 Před 3 lety +4

    This player has hot output because early CDs were mastered somewhat more properly at first...only somewhat. Digital has a top volume shelf that causes "clipping" if a recording is too loud for the disc.
    "Mastered somewhat more properly...only somewhat"...
    Early CDs were recorded very quietly from old album tapes, so all the spikes (like drum strikes or vocal jumps) won't be louder than the format's top limit.
    "The CD Loudness Wars" came after remasters of session tapes (not album tapes) began. Session tapes sound far better than album tapes, which could be several generations of copies down from a session tape--each generation made away from session tapes get more dull and hissy. Session tapes are most dynamic and clear, so every volume spike is perfect as it should be. What "The Loudness Wars" did--old and new recordings alike squashed all those dynamic spikes that give humans our "emotional connections" to performances. You don't notice that the artist is playing intentionally louder or quieter to invoke the feelings they want to.

    • @rods6405
      @rods6405 Před 3 lety

      Understand what you are saying however
      2 V RMS (MSB ; line out) standard output for all Sony unbalanced digital audio equipment to avoid the poor signal to noise ratio of the input amplifiers on power amps and cassette decks from some manufactures!

  • @henry.sanchez
    @henry.sanchez Před 8 měsíci

    This was well explained. Thank you. I learned more than I thought I would about the first Sony CD player, I mean it had a heat sink?! Wow.

  • @lucalone
    @lucalone Před 3 lety +1

    Am I the only one who really loves the design of that player? it looks fantastic !

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra Před 3 lety +1

      Not at all, I also think it doesn't look like it's almost 40 yr old at all.

  • @jeremytravis360
    @jeremytravis360 Před 3 lety +1

    I was the Buyer of a Hi-Fi shop and a Sony main dealer. They were great first machines and I bought a couple for myself. I didn't keep them but a great first buy. The CD players all got better until production got moved to other countries. I still have a couple of the better machines made in Japan and well built.

    • @Harald_Reindl
      @Harald_Reindl Před 3 lety

      there is no better in case of a digital media - the only problematic place is the DAC and that's why digital outputs exist
      in fact there is no difference between a 10 dollar or a 10000 player for audiofools

  • @RagnarJensen
    @RagnarJensen Před 3 lety +1

    About the buttons and the clicking sound. The buttons are not touch-capacitive. They poke at a short throw membrane keyboard, which has very little mechanical and no audible feedback. The clicking sound is actually made by a relay. The relay isn't connected to anything, its sole purpose is to make a clicking sound when a button is pressed. It's even labeled "CLICK SOUND" in the schematic.
    Speaking of audible feedback, there is a "BEEP ON/OFF" switch on the underside of the unit. You can have it make a beep when it receives a command from the remote control.

  • @therealrodhull1
    @therealrodhull1 Před 3 lety +4

    Wow, that looks like a player from the late 90's!! Ahead of its time!

    • @Frisenette
      @Frisenette Před 3 lety +2

      80s design was just superior.

    • @jimmiesmith5811
      @jimmiesmith5811 Před 3 lety

      @@thefreestylefrEaK It look like it said it was made 7-84 on the sticker on the back

    • @therealrodhull1
      @therealrodhull1 Před 3 lety

      @@thefreestylefrEaK
      I said it "looks" like a player from the 90s! (ie, it looks ahead of its time for an 80s player). Doh..

  • @albear972
    @albear972 Před 3 měsíci

    Holy smokes! I've seen this CD player in photos but only the front. I was definitely *not* expecting to see that absolutely gigantic transformer and heatsink. I would have liked to know how much power that took. I didn't see any sticker with the watt rating. Cool stuff.

  • @NOWThatsRichy
    @NOWThatsRichy Před 3 lety +1

    Still looks very modern, I still have a Philips CD 630 player, from 1990, top of the Philips range at the time, still all fully working, including remote control & connected up to a Sony separates system.

  • @josephatnip2398
    @josephatnip2398 Před rokem +1

    When my dad was in the army back in 1982 one of his army buddies wives was in a car accident and used her insurance money to buy a huge stereo system and she had a CD player it was the first time I ever seen anything like that it was so expensive it was ridiculous I couldn't afford a CD player until sometime in the '90s

  • @paulbradley705
    @paulbradley705 Před rokem +1

    In Australia I never saw a cd player until 1988 but my mate didn't talk about it.

    • @Jordan-fn5rj
      @Jordan-fn5rj Před rokem +1

      when did cd players got big what year

  • @GryCkt
    @GryCkt Před 3 lety +1

    Remembering me that i changed lot's of the famous bx ic, we were strictly ordered to do so on all machines that came in to service, sony did this of course free of charge.
    A few modifications more and you have a reference class cd-player, still in 2021!

  • @jonsingle1614
    @jonsingle1614 Před 3 lety +2

    Bought one new in 84....the 2nd gen models had just come out so the 1st gen models were on sale for half price....that thing is a tank ! It was so hard finding cds back then....my first cd was Christopher Cross....still have it....I later sold my 101 when the 3rd gen models came out....CDP 302....wish I had kept that 101

  • @sunspot42
    @sunspot42 Před 3 lety

    Somehow Diamonds department store in downtown Phoenix managed to get one of these in stock in early 1983 and it was amazing to listen to connected to a high-end Sony rack system. No noise, instant track access and those soft touch controls with the click. Smooth, glassy, transparent sound compared to any turntable or cassette deck in the $500 price range, and NO noise. The only thing I’d heard before that came close was reel to reel tape.
    It would be another 4 years before I scored a player for myself. They dropped in price pretty dramatically starting in 1987 or so.

  • @hifijohn
    @hifijohn Před 3 lety +2

    Bought mine in mid 80's I loved the convenience the dead quiet of it perfect speed and you can just jump from track to any other track also it was completely immune to any type of vibration,i remember being amazed that i could put the player right ontop my speaker.the only problem was the sound , it was very cold mechanical and emotionless, I could listen to vinyl all day but couldn't get through more than few songs on the cd player.when I went to college I would do cd vs vinyl listening tests and the listeners would always pick the vinyl as more musical.

    • @djhrecordhound4391
      @djhrecordhound4391 Před 3 lety

      You've just explained why analogue is more appealing to humans; People hear AND FEEL all of the recording's dynamics properly.
      The host said this player has a very loud output. Early CDs were mastered very quietly to allow wider dynamic range within the format's volume limits. By the 2000s, we had "CD loudness wars", where drum strikes and vocal jumps are squashed to being up overall volume. It took all emotion and feel out of music.

    • @v5e762
      @v5e762 Před 2 lety

      It's cold because it doesn't have rumble, hiss and record pop. Rip your vinyl to cd and then play it back in the CDP-101 and you won't be able to tell the difference.

  • @williammanganaro9070
    @williammanganaro9070 Před 3 lety +3

    Antishock actually reads and saves the information on the disc a few seconds in advance, so if the player gets jolted, the saved information will play and the listener won't notice that the CD skipped.

    • @solwidotnl
      @solwidotnl Před 3 lety +4

      Not on this cd player. The amount of memory needed for that would be way too expensive back in the day. Remember that in 1982 the Commodore 64 was introduced, with 64 kB of RAM. A 1 second buffer of CD quality audio already requires the combined memory of 3 of those computers.

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 Před 3 lety

      At 176KB/sec, a three second buffer’s worth of SRAM would have easily cost as much as that whole player.

  • @bikdav
    @bikdav Před 9 měsíci

    The anti-shock was meant to control skipping while heavy footed people were walking around. The early CD players skipped the way some record players did. Many cd players after 1990 had the ant-shock built in (along with much better transports in the first place).

  • @oldgamecafe
    @oldgamecafe Před 3 lety +6

    When I went to Osaka I was in an used audio store, the owner recommended me this CD player but I didn't know that was the first CD player until now.

  • @andreygrellert2027
    @andreygrellert2027 Před 2 lety

    I love old technologies, sad i probably never gonna have one of these.

  • @dan0711123
    @dan0711123 Před 3 lety +1

    I bought my first CD player in 1987 from Rat Shack I still have it and it works well . Newer models sound a lot smoother and more natural

  • @Raptor50aus
    @Raptor50aus Před 3 lety

    I have a Red Sony D-50 first portable compact disc player still playing perfect.

  • @spiritwalker1988
    @spiritwalker1988 Před 3 lety +1

    Amazing !! So beautiful !! I would love to have one of that !!

  • @MegaPete
    @MegaPete Před 4 lety +3

    Kool unit you allways do nice

  • @mockupguy3577
    @mockupguy3577 Před 3 lety +1

    I feel like i recognize this from my local hi-if store back in the day.

  • @155bazza
    @155bazza Před 3 lety +3

    Bought mine in 1982, I still have it but can't obtain a new laser. Cost me £550 (approx $950)

  • @stephanzuijdendorp2531
    @stephanzuijdendorp2531 Před 3 lety +1

    I think the Reset button is the stop
    NAD used this as well

  • @ERHospitalEmergencyRooms
    @ERHospitalEmergencyRooms Před 3 lety +3

    It being the first CD from 1982. I'm surprised it still works.

    • @AltCutTV
      @AltCutTV Před 3 lety +1

      The benefit of having 4 motors, no belts to replace.
      Techmoan would be disapointed.

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra Před 3 lety +1

      Quite probably it has gone through thorough servicing, but not bad anyway.

  • @RepomanGP
    @RepomanGP Před 3 měsíci

    I bought one of these back in 1982. If I remember correctly, to stop it from playing, you press the play button again.

  • @lahtiman8141
    @lahtiman8141 Před rokem

    Looks actually very cool😮

  • @davidjgomm
    @davidjgomm Před 3 lety +3

    "Not a, you know super high quality CD player". It was top of the range in 1982 with only a Marantz/Philips model for competition. And it was built like a tank. I wanted one but I had to settle for the Philips.

    • @arnolddill
      @arnolddill Před 3 lety

      Ironically the Philips one (CD-100) proved to have better performance and longevity. It’s now very highly prized by collectors and most are still in good working order - More so than the Sony.
      Back then it was seen as a basic model lacking in features compared to the Sony (possibly why you’d have preferred the Sony?). How perceptions can change with the passage of time !

  • @anibalcesarnishizk2205

    No one can deny the elegance of the CD'S PLAYER lines.

  • @BenedictChrysosthomos
    @BenedictChrysosthomos Před 3 lety

    I bought that in May 1983 for 2350 DM. I still own it. It lives retired in my livingroom now.

  • @thiscorrosion900
    @thiscorrosion900 Před 3 lety

    My first CD player was a Hitachi DA-5000, similar design to this one, got it in 1985 or so. I'd already bought myself a Sanyo rack system in 1984, but
    it didn't come with the CD player, so had to pick up the Hitachi later. The Hitachi had a slimmer profile case than this Sony did, and the earlier Hitachis. Sounded phenomenal
    and lasted until 1997 or so, when I sold my rack system including the player. I used to show off my rack system with four speakers running, extra tweeters, and
    played the first batch of RUSH CDs to friends of mine, and those CDs sounded amazing on that system via the Hitachi. No subwoofer required. Anybody that
    tells you those early CDs didn't sound phenomenal on a good system are full of beans, the Rush CDs at least, sounded great.

  • @longtendorangers6960
    @longtendorangers6960 Před 2 lety

    Happy 40th anniversary sony cd first player

  • @bikdav
    @bikdav Před 2 lety +2

    Watch SONY do a remake on this classic.

    • @SkyFiAudio
      @SkyFiAudio  Před 2 lety +1

      That would be retro-amazing-cool...

  • @RealHIFIHelp
    @RealHIFIHelp Před 3 lety +3

    Interesting. Not bad for a first model.

  • @dilbyjones
    @dilbyjones Před 2 lety

    I really love this style of video. If I could have one wish it would be this style of video.

  • @jorgecuelar3391
    @jorgecuelar3391 Před 3 lety +1

    I was hoping for a tear down... But great video👍

  • @TheTarrMan
    @TheTarrMan Před 3 lety +2

    I think the "Anti Shock" is so the music will still play even if the unit gets bumped. If anyone remembers the CD walkmans/discman, many of them had that too. I have no idea what that technology is doing on a home desktop unit though. Maybe the early units were extra sensitive to vibrations from your base if you're playing your music loud. . . just a guess.
    A crude explanation of how that works is basically the laser reads a minute or so ahead of what the speakers are actually playing, if the unit gets disrupted/bumped the laser will stop and re-read that section while the music keeps playing uninterrupted. I believe Sony eventually patented the name "G-Shock".
    I have no idea what the Auto Pause does though. Is there an owners manual for it out there somewhere online? They would surly talk about that stuff in their. I did some very quick Googleing and came up with the explanation of "the music will automatically pause when the headphones are disconnected". . . . is that it?

    • @RagnarJensen
      @RagnarJensen Před 3 lety +2

      Anti Shock on this unit does not use a memory buffer. Memory was silly expensive at the time. What it does is adjust the tracking servo loop, to react faster and follow the track on the CD more precisely. The downside is that it gets more sensitive to dirt and scratches on the CD.
      Auto Pause puts the unit in pause mode when the next song is just about to start. It's for situations where you don't want the next song to start playing automatically, e.g. karaoke and radio stations. In the service manual it's mentioned as "Auto pause function provided for sing-along enjoyment."

    • @TheTarrMan
      @TheTarrMan Před 3 lety

      @@RagnarJensen That makes a lot of sense.

  • @josexavierjr.5633
    @josexavierjr.5633 Před 3 lety

    I got mine in 1983 and I had only 10 CDs for about a year; at $20 a piece, it was tough to keep up at that time. That player was built like tank, and played well for about 10 years! I had it connected to a Fisher 500B FM tube receiver..................

  • @MichelLinschoten
    @MichelLinschoten Před 2 měsíci

    Let me coin in there in "not that well build"
    *Full cast tray
    * Just about the entire transport is cast you won't even see that today anymore in the upper end class !
    * Kss-100a optical pick up (look it up) shames some of the high end brands I've worked on .
    *External transformer, that's literally what it is.
    *Conductive touch
    *Multiple motors to perform each action.
    The build quality even today stands head tall above some of the higher end branded stuff I've serviced!
    And most ones i serviced was an easy hall sensor adjustment . I had one here, that went to 4 repair stores . And all it took was adjustment of the tracking. So far for the "professional" lol

  • @MrTheunivideo
    @MrTheunivideo Před 3 lety

    Nice video!

  • @timothy2830
    @timothy2830 Před 3 lety

    HEY... the reason the volume may seem "hot" is because CD mastering was new at the time. ALL Compact Discs were normalized under 0db to prevent clipping (max -6db without compression... maybe?) So the output had to be LOUD or consumer's would have to have their volume knobs at 8 (out of 11) just to hear anything at a normal level. Today, Most Music is compressed and maxed at 0db (any louder, there's digital clipping).
    ALSO, you mentioned Philips... should have mentioned how different the laser transports were between the two.

  • @andydelle4509
    @andydelle4509 Před 3 lety +1

    How about an inside look?

  • @thomasdieter3883
    @thomasdieter3883 Před 3 lety

    Very good Video - thank you for explanations and upload
    I never saw such outside power supply and also not 'antishock' switcht - interesting!

  • @hochh6978
    @hochh6978 Před 4 měsíci

    The outlook is ideologically close to that of Philips CD-100 model. Does the laser pickup still perform well? I believe that early models used glass pickups that don't age and get dull like organic lenses.

  • @davidlees9096
    @davidlees9096 Před rokem

    That's a very nice player

  • @Andersljungberg
    @Andersljungberg Před 3 lety

    My first CD player was a Denon in 1990. a hifi magazine named it the best CD player in the budget class, it cost the equivalent of 200 $ or 2000 Swedish kronor

  • @enji-channel
    @enji-channel Před 10 měsíci +1

    自分もこの世界初のCDプレーヤーのSONYのCDP-101を持っています。ただ、HARD OFFのJUNK品ですけど。

  • @SuperWarren83
    @SuperWarren83 Před rokem

    I Still have my 101....Sadly the draw wont open(may be open button)
    ...In Aus these players were marketed to radio station (hence the "auto pause')swich,btw my lid was Aloy, heavy as all get out.

  • @tonymcgeachin9906
    @tonymcgeachin9906 Před 3 lety

    I had the 102, most solidly built player I've ever had, best disc transport tray too.

    • @bfs5113
      @bfs5113 Před 3 lety

      Yeah, 102 was my first, but not as solid as my CD transport later on.

  • @cmm888
    @cmm888 Před 2 lety

    Still working is good!

  • @biosskw
    @biosskw Před 3 lety +6

    When he mentioned I don't know what is anti-shock I was shocked.

    • @leonvanderlinden6929
      @leonvanderlinden6929 Před 3 lety

      Shocking.

    • @elgringoec
      @elgringoec Před 3 lety

      Isn't that where they use special screws to make it harder for unauthorized personnel to remove the covers? 🤔😂

    • @JosueSerrano7
      @JosueSerrano7 Před 3 lety

      Same here!!!! wow !

    • @conkerman01
      @conkerman01 Před 3 lety

      I wasn’t because it was on.

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 Před 3 lety +2

      What you’re not realizing is the common method of anti-shock protection requires a memory buffer that would have cost hundreds of dollars in ‘82. So “what does _that_ mean?” is a legit question for this particular model. Because it’s quite likely not what you think it is.

  • @mateuszorlinski7334
    @mateuszorlinski7334 Před rokem +1

    Philips released 3 players in 1983, CD100 and CD200 were top-loaders, but CD300 was a drawer-loader.

  • @richardnowak2941
    @richardnowak2941 Před 3 lety +3

    Worked for Sony Service back then and remember the big deal when we got to work on one of these when they were new. Sony was the Apple of the 80's

    • @ianknight9589
      @ianknight9589 Před 3 lety

      HA I'm also an ex-sony engineer and worked at Sony Service on them although I started in 1990

    • @1hit1ders
      @1hit1ders Před 2 lety +1

      I worked at the Sony Service Center in Costa Mesa, CA. Which SSC were you at? I started there in August, 1983 - the same month the CD player shown in the video was made. One was just plopped on my bench and I was told "fix it". Uh, yeah. How? What is this thing? Just joking, I knew what a CD player was but since it was brand new tech, I'd never worked on one or had any kind of training on how to repair it. I got up to speed pretty fast, but it was tough at first. They had a lot of issues with the servo driver IC's, IIRC (it's been a while...) and the one sent to KLOS here in L.A. had a problem with skipping. I actually called them at the time and told them what was wrong, and to send it in for repair. I owned one myself, which I traded for a car to another Sony employee at the time (funny story) but I got the better end of the deal. The car was junk, the CDP-101 was great for its time. I sold it years ago, probably in the 90s sometime. Remember the BU-1C laser base unit in the CDP-302 and others? That simplified repair a lot - went through hundreds of those over the years. I still have one new in the box.

    • @richardnowak2941
      @richardnowak2941 Před 2 lety

      @@ianknight9589 I think we had a class together once for Sony

    • @ianknight9589
      @ianknight9589 Před 2 lety

      @@1hit1ders ha, good times though. I worked for SES in Staines UK that was part owned by Sony and part owned by 3 directors. In the same building as the Sony warehouse and used to love buying graded items.

    • @ianknight9589
      @ianknight9589 Před 2 lety

      @@richardnowak2941 your name rings a bell 🤣 would that have been Sony in Thatcham UK

  • @pippocalippo2447
    @pippocalippo2447 Před rokem

    A collector's item, Just now

  • @mschorer
    @mschorer Před 3 lety

    I had exactly this one back in the day!

  • @1984robert
    @1984robert Před 2 lety +2

    What is the material of the disc tray? Is it plastic also or is it some kind of metal/composite material like in the great ES series later?

    • @SkyFiAudio
      @SkyFiAudio  Před 2 lety +2

      We shot this video a bit back, but I'm quite sure it wasn't plain plastic. I believe it was a metal/composite as they used the better to the best when building these first generation units. And it shows as here we are in 2022 and they STILL work!

  • @satkinson8281
    @satkinson8281 Před 3 lety

    Very good video mate thanks👍

  • @Techrewinds
    @Techrewinds Před 2 lety

    Aww, the early 80s was the start of the compact disc era I have a feeling CD are going to be the next vinyl in the coming years!

    • @Jordan-fn5rj
      @Jordan-fn5rj Před rokem

      so what year was bigger on cds 80s or 90s?