That's the first linear-tracking turntable I've ever seen which uses a ceramic cartridge, cleverly disguised to look like a P-Mount magnetic cartridge.
I had one of those as a kid, not sure if it's the exact model but everything is where I remember it... I listened to some very personally important albums for the first time on that as a young teenager
Vertical record desks are always fascinating to encounter. I hadn't realised that he record deck mechanism was a BSR Product a VL315. I wonder if it was used in other systems other than the Schneider?
That's the first linear-tracking turntable I've ever seen which uses a ceramic cartridge, cleverly disguised to look like a P-Mount magnetic cartridge.
I'm not surprised Amstrad would do something like that to try to fool the consumer.
I had one of those as a kid, not sure if it's the exact model but everything is where I remember it... I listened to some very personally important albums for the first time on that as a young teenager
Vertical record desks are always fascinating to encounter. I hadn't realised that he record deck mechanism was a BSR Product a VL315. I wonder if it was used in other systems other than the Schneider?
A vintage music centre ~ 2 cassette decks, radio & record player