When the light went on, I was like _"Wait, it's working now for some reason? Will he notice?"_ and so he did. It's a happy if inexplicable occasion when things you thought were broken just start working again for no good reason.
When re-gluing a plastic post as you have done here, a zip tie around it is handy to clamp it, and may be trimmed and left on unless it interferes with some other protrusion.
I use a copper tube of a right size. Maybe it's a bit too much but it's a definitive repair. If the screw is loose (thread ripped), just stick a wooden toothpick before screwing it back!
I have had good luck with using fiberglass mesh drywall tape that i had lying around as reinforcement on plastic things i thought would never hold up for gluing and it has worked surpricingly well, i usually use it with cyanoacrylate glue, i would totally glue that around that post. I just put the tape on and cover it with glue. Im a pro in electronic repairs but i came up with this method on my own by chance, its just something i have used for my own things at least so far and it would be more of a last resort solution in a pro scenario. Using zip tie may certainly be a good option as well in this case, the fiberglass mesh is great in that it can be adapted to reinforce many different shapes of objects as well, you can take off single strands etc.
an alternative to zip ties i use is heatshrink tubing! once you first glue the broken post together, you wet its surface by cyanoacrylate and quickly slide the heatshrink on it and heat it up. The combination of tightly shrunken tubing and superglue makes it nice and sturdy! if there's enough room surrounding the post you can do it twice to make it even more solid
You haven't listened to Bob Dylan until you have heard him on the original 8-track. And you haven't heard that unless it was through a failed Learjet product with dodgy belts.
I'm going to go against the grain, but I believe the Lear Jet Stereo 8 is the real "diamond in the rough" device here. I'm sure it would require quite the restoring to get it back to it's intended condition, but comparatively speaking, I'm way more impressed with the engineering of the Lear Jet. Full disclosure, I knew Bill Lear, I was his attorney's son, and I had a friend who had this same machine. The intended design of the machine was to leave it in a semi-permanent location, like a dorm-room. Then, you detached the one speaker and took the player as a single-speaker player. There's missing hardware that would secure the two sides together and would separate by pressing that button on the side. I believe this unit was originally sold as early as the late 60s, which makes it considerably older than the GE, which appears to me to be a Sanyo OEM, and probably has a lot of the electronics shared with a cassette version. Don't get me wrong, if I wanted an 8-track 'boombox' to listen to, I would go with the GE. I just appreciate the engineering that went into the Lear Jet. Great video!
I occasionally tinker with electronics myself and this video gave me that warm feeling again, from when you've really not done anything specific to the light, but it just decides to start working again. Love it!
@@Techmoansince it looks like neon bulbs, my bet is the one contact that’s activated on DC was too dirty but the other contact (only on AC do both activate) was fine. Since neons need a higher strike voltage than operating voltage, the higher resistance probably impeded that initial strike on DC. Hopefully once it ran a while on AC it got through any oxidation and will work on DC!
@@kaitlyn__L Not much chance they are neons. Incandescent bulbs with orange filters. This thing operates on 12V, neon lamps need 60-80V to strike. It was just a bad contact, it is common enough with low voltage stuff that a very faint layer of oxide/dirt will prevent any current flow, but if it's a wiping contact, some usage might just clean that unwanted layer off.
@@mrnmrn1 unless there’s proof of no capacitor boost circuit the battery native output voltage doesn’t mean much, neons were the most common indicator lamps and there’s the characteristic slight flicker when it’s powered from AC on the Jackery.
@@kaitlyn__L That would have been quite a Rube Goldberg approach to make a voltage booster just for the track display... I can't notice any flicker, only during track skip, and that is due to the contacts. BTW incandescent lamps do flicker slightly on AC, Mat probably used his camera in 50Hz mode, so any slight 60Hz flicker should be visible - I can't see any. The track display runs on DC most probably. The only benefit of neon lamps in this application would be their longer lifespan, but if the goal is an orange glow like this, an underheated incandescent bulb works just fine, and has a lifetime that exceeds the lifetime of the tape transport.
Random sentimental thought, but when I heard "The Times They Are a-Changin'", I thought about my friend Brian. He unfortunately passed away of a fentanyl overdose 4 years ago and they played that as everyone walked up to his casket at the funeral. Thank you so much for the countless hours of entertainment!
I'm a big fan of your videos. May I make a suggestion about measuring belt diameter? Fold the old belt so that it's flat on the table and straight, and measure the inside length in that position. Divide that reading by 1.57 and you have the actual diameter of the old belt. Then order one a tad smaller and you're good to go. This from an audio repair tech who's been fixing stereos since 1977.
@@Smileyrat The circumference of a circle divided by π equals the diameter. Since we measure half the circumference (belt is folded), then we need to use half the π too (~3.14 / 2 = 1.57).
I got the Panasonic stereo "Swiss cheese " player and the GE mono version of this one shown in the video. The mono sounds the best because it has a slightly bigger speaker. There is another version called the "loud mouth" like this.
I love that metallic blue color around the knobs on that first device. Gorgeous color blue, would look awesome on the right type of vintage sports car.
Hi. In America, we had one just like that Branded for a chain over hear. Western Auto. 8D cells. Thank you. Was about 72. My mom's. She died in 75. Didn't get to use it long. Thank you for the memory. 8 tracks. Cool sir😁😜♥️
Ah, Western Auto, they were like a miniature Sears. Very popular and successful in small towns that were not large enough to support a Sears store. FIrestone also had similar stores. The Firestone name was on all kinds of stuff not related to tires. I have two Firestone radios, one with a Voice 0f Music record changer.
That Lear-Jet model reminds me of my younger years at the beach as my neighbor had one. It spent many nights outside but each years it was there to entertain us. The simple 8-track mechanism was not affected by the sand they way cassette system were. Thanks!
My face lit up when the GE roared to life at 20:07 and sounded so loud and clear! I gasped out loud when I saw the light for Channel 1 flicker on for a split second at 23:54, did it start working again?! Brilliant! Thanks for the great video, it's so nice to see these machines getting restored and coming back to life!
You can always give ancient plastic parts like this one a soak with glycerin first and a silicone oil rubdown second. This works well against the plastic drying up and becoming brittle with fine cracks eventually.
Thanks for commenting re hydrating & protecting older plastics. Do you prefer a specific brand of glycerin and/or silicon oil? Is there any product that you’d avoid using? Thanks again!
@@HeyMJ. Not really, I just got the pure glycerin from the pharmacy, they'll fill little bottles for you. And silicone oil is available as a lubricant, should also be pure, at most with an evaporating solvent for use in a spray can.
Is this a treatment that can be applied to belts in plastic bags to prolong their life if they are i.e. likely they will be untouched for a long time before use?
When I saw the 1st program light coming up I really felt that it was a way of the device to say Thank You for bringing me back to life and for your kind words! Great video as always mate keep up, cheers from Greece
Thanks to people like you we can still collectively actively remember these devices and continue to have them in our discourse, re-learning them and re-considering their values. This witness/memory duty is a really important part of our existence, I would dare think.
It always reminds me of Mark and Lard from Radio 1 back when it was actually worth listening to. Lard's Classic cuts. "Is that record hard to find?" "In that condition, yes"
Who knew that the 8-track 'program select' button would serve as a 'copyright strike avoidance' button decades later? Also, I love the blue anodized panel on the Learjet unit, that colour really 'pops'.
That light coming on on the #1 channel in the end means that it's happy that you restored it and that you're a #1. P.S. what a great looking boombox that is.
Hail from Chicago. I've had the honor of repairing an early Lear Jet automobile 8 track player. Lear himself invented the eight track player. On an early model, It did not have a belt. The flywheel was mounted directly to the capstan that drove the tape and it was also the armature of the motor,it was direct drive.. It was a wonderful piece of engineering. Very heavy and industrial looking. I don't believe the unit was repairable, but to see it in use was a marvel in itself.made in the U.S.A.
It's always amazing to see how much more pleasing mechanical electrical devices were, compared to todays devices. Guess I'm getting old and nostalgic.. :)
General Electric radios from this era had some of the best AM tuners to be found in portables. The track 1 indicator light was likely out due to oxidation of the mechanical track position switch linked to the tape head positioning mechanism. Operating it a few times scratched through the oxidation.
The reason the tape came out of the cart is that you were playing it upside down. This wasn't a problem with very early made carts because it had a mechanism inside that kept the tape spooled on the reel. Modern carts just mostly re-spool using a guide in the plastic of the tape housing and gravity to spool. If a tape is played upside down, it will unevenly spool and may even jam once it reaches the middle, causing a stuck tape.
Don't store your tapes upside-down if you are in a vehicle moving with vibrations, which also causes the tape to unspool. They can be left like this, maybe only for a very short while.
Bob Dylan too ... My parents had that same album on 8 Track! These old devices you demo are just plain awesome. And the fact you get most of them back up and running is even more awesome!
Competent yet down to earth as always, Mat. Very enjoyable. Loved the cynical pop at the 'ooh, you can't mix batteries' brigade! Extra points for the epoxy; I'm so tired of youtubers trying to repair structural elements with CA glue.
At 21:05 you can see that there is also a black screw that attaches the black plastic you tried to remove to the front. The knob seems to go to the cog visible in the yellow-ish metal below that black plastic, it may not hinder you removing the black plastic once you loosened all three screws. Edit: Well, as the light is magically working now, there is ofc no need to remove it anymore.
Tip about the knob that wouldn’t come off…sometimes there’s a setscrew in it in the end of the raised section, usually opposite the side with the indicator arrow.
Matt, one thing I'd really suggest for prying is picking up some of those plastic pry tools. There are ones made from glass fiber reinforced nylon, and they work great for popping things apart without marring plastic! I want to say Menda made the ones I have, but there are others. Also, for some reason the design of that General Electric model seems very familiar to me. I know they did some other ones in similar designs, but I can't for the life of me remember where I saw them.
As an old school B-Boy, I would have happily carried that RCA 3-5531A Boombox, as me and my crew carried our rolled up canvas/cardboard, down to the shopping centre, to bust some moves. 😃 Love a Saturday morning with a cuppa and A Techmoan video upload, so relaxing. B-Boys will always be boys!! Respect, peace and love!
The Learjet unit reminds me of one I used in grade school as a child. And I suspect that’s the most common market where a teacher would set it up for the classroom and not move it much throughout the day/week/semester depending on the class. It wasn’t really portable as much as presentational. I could see that similar to a slide presentation stereo.
Yes, that olive drab, military hardware look was very popular in the late 70s. Every piece of portable audio equipment had that styling. I remember it well. Oddly, it's hard to come by now. I've looked for it in the usual places like ebay but I rarely see examples of it
@techmoan Hey Mat! I find it funny you give the twits any time by bringing up the fact that you put the right speaker on the left side accidentally. You should just let them stew in their own juices. Those of us like me thoroughly enjoy your videos BECAUSE of who you are! Please keep them coming! This takes me back to when I’d ride around with my dad in those old trucks he used to drive, delivering paint and whatnot. Please take care and have a great rest of your weekend!
Maybe I did not pay attention much but in this video it seems you added a lot more visual effects than usual. I really liked panning accross the buttons in 6:01 and showing unusual angels like the bathroom sink at 22:36 I think there were more pannings and they make the video more lively so keep going Mat
A boombox with an 8 track player that's so frigging cool. Your channel has reignited my passion for "old school" audio equipment (particularly boomboxes). Have so many fond memories of using them
A fiberglass pen cleans up battery contacts well, also, winding string around the back of a knob will lift it off without damaging the plastic surface.
When you’re sure that a knob has to be removed and your fingernails or screwdriver aren’t up to it, try a pulling on the loose ends of a shoelace fully wrapped around the shaft. The pulling force mostly acts in the direction of OFF. A flat sports lace for very difficult removals has worked for me (thanks to the tape-heads forum who helped me when the big flat knobs on my Revox reel2reel tape recorder wouldn’t budge. Thanks Matt!
Ooh, got a Varta battery in there. Best get that sorted! These repair videos are always great, I always really appreciate how you keep things in chronological order rather than just saying it needs a new belt, here’s one I ordered earlier. Regardless of if the thing under repair works at the end it’s a joy to see inside these machines with you!
We used to make a concoction of cleaning agent for plastics when we had a computer shop back then. It's just a combination of Wipe Out and Denatured Alcohol. It cleans the discoloration of plastics like that. We use it on CRT monitors. My older brother taught me about that because thats what they use in the company where he works. They service big companies (they are one of the official service center of IBM) that uses POS, computers, typewriters etc. that has plastic housing on the machines
GE carried quality electronic products in those days. I found a GE 1985 19" TV at a antique store that I just plugged in and worked with just a few adjustments to the pots inside to bring back the picture brightness. Was made in Indiana but was close to the last few TV models made in the US. I have not found any GE products from the 80's with leaking caps yet, knock on wood.
General Electric made (or had made) a lot of cool portable audio players in the seventies and eighties. 99% plastic. I had several GE cassette AM-FM portable units but now I gotta try to find an 8-track stereo by GE. If they are in good condition they are no longer cheap. Thanks for showing this model. The other two pale in comparison.
When these portable 8-Track players were new they were noted as battery-eaters because of the excess friction of tape feeding from the center. That also made tape breakage more likely. When cassettes came along everyone was more than happy to abandon the 8-Track, and portable players would play 3- 4 times the music off the same set of batteries.
It was very common for 8-tracks to sound like that even when there was nothing wrong with them but we used to do is wedge a matchbook with the 8-track cartridge until it sounded correct usually done the trick
@@Dave01Rhodes I think he's referring to the pressure pad. They were a piece of foam or felt that's job was making sure the tape properly contacts the playback head. If the foam denigrates with age (And they often do) it can cause crosstalk (multiple tracks playing at once) or loss of audio quality. Has nothing to to do with speed issues thought, If you're having those, it's caused by the player.
Hello Mat. Thanks, as always, for a very entertaining video. Must say I'm glad to see you looking so well - you're obviously looking after yourself properly...which I'm happy about. We, your audience, value your work hugely and would like to see many many more interesting videos in the future! Take care.
We had one that speakers that snap together like the one you have but smaller with six inch speakers which sounded quite good because they were insulated well and you could set them 8 feet apart This one had a feature I've never seen anywhere else, it was able to record on to 8 track tapes. We were able to get a blank 8 track tape from Radio Shack, and that was also the brand name that was on the 8-track player. Radio Shack was the go to store for electronics in the 70s and 80s. Great Video.
Yeah, but what was the car? Fun Fact: On 15th September 1965, the Ford Motor Company became the first automaker to offer an eight-track tape player as an option for their entire line of vehicles on sale in the US.
Those GE boomboxes really were the last great 8 track players in my opinion. They were built like absolute tanks and you still see a ton on eBay from what I remember.
When looking through electronics sections of catalogs from stores like Radio Shack, Penneys, Sears, Wards and countless others (Im sure the UK had their equivalents) Im amazed at the variety of models!!! Always wondered where these designs came from as they varied from store to store. There were name brands like Sony, GE, RCA, etc, store brands, and then just generic names.
When this stuff was being made it all came from factories in Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore or Hong Kong. The 8-track mechanism came from just a few factories, the electronics were very similar, but the thing that set them apart was the exterior design. Plastic production had replaced most wood or metal and thus, even before computer modeling, it was quite easy to customize the audio devices. There was a never ending array of faceplates, knobs, buttons, switches, etc, all in lovely chromed plastic. Many models changed exterior appearance every year, but the stuff inside was mostly the same. All Radio Shack (Realistic) audio stuff can be found with other brand names, but often with very different cosmetics.
What a happy happy machine….I couldn’t believe it when that number one light came on…I actually did a little dance round my kitchen! The only thing I’m surprised about was your Luke warm response to this miracle, I would have rang all my family and mates, sent a letter to parliament and probably one to Father Christmas then built a glass case for the machine, put it on public display with a big red arrow pointing at the number one button! Rob
Your videos have the best outro soundtrack on TH-cam and with that Six Million Dollar Man computing sound at the end, it’s just brilliant. Never change it.
The "Lear Jet" design/concept reminds me of the Hitachi TRQ 233s portable cassette player I had as a teenager in the late 1970s. It was from the early 1970s and had detachable flip out speaker "doors". That really looked like a "proto boombox"!
Continuing to love your videos !! When I was in America,back in 1980, I remember seeing that model 8 Track/radio you featured in this video ,there was also a boombox with a Cassette recorder,as well as 8 track on sale at Montgomery Ward !!
I have an excellent condition Radio Shack Concertmate 8 that I use around the house for portable music. It just needed some cleanup when I picked it up off eBay including cleaning old sticky grease off the mechanism that switches tracks (along with a little bit of lube). I noticed a lot of similarities to the internals of that GE portable. I know RS rarely made its own equipment but rather had it made by others, sometimes as just a re-badge. The track indicator lights are driven by leaf switches that ride on a cam on the track change mechanism. I suspect the suddenly working Track 1 light was from exercising the switch a few times.
Cool. Yes, Radio Shack stuff was made to their specifications, but all of it came from major Asian, British or German manufactures, so your Concertmate was likely available in several other brands with slightly different cosmetics.
Brings back memories. As a kid I used to look at the Allied Radio and Lafayette Radio catalogs and dream about getting a 8-track portable. My dad vetoed it and since he held the pursestrings I never got one. Good things come to those who wait as several years later I had a component stereo system and my folks got me a Wollensak 8-track recorder for Christmas. I think I was about 13 or 14. My first car at sixteen was the perfect opportunity to experience my own tapes on the go. The thing that bugged me most was the track change which would either require expert planning in my recordings or, as I came to prefer due to ease, just let it segue right into the next track with that little glitch in continuous sound. By the time I graduated high school I had to have a cassette though and I got a Pioneer Supertuner one which was pretty good. I actually still love cassettes for probably nostalgic reasons and the fact they were mini reel-to-reels which before all the portable stuff I had a Wollensak 4-track 1/4" recording deck in my component system. There's just something about making your own tapes. Anyone in the US remember Burstein & Applebee Electronic Company? They specialized in parts and close-outs so I got that reel to reel when I was about 12 from them. Those electronic catalogs were my personal Sear's Wish Books! I definitely enjoyed this trip down 8-track memory lane.
That is similar to how my Dad's reel to reel tape recorder from the 60s had speakers attached. They did latch on better, buy you had to hide the wires inside every time you put it back together. It did sound pretty good though.
Brilliant video as usual, I never got into 8 track (although we had a stereo at home with a player/recorder) and I think one of the cars we had did have a player in the early seventies but not as standard. Considering 8 track was designed to go into Leer Jets originally, its amazing how popular they became. I might have to look at getting either a car one or finding a recorder to add to the home system I have just to be completist... That will please the wife no end.....
Jewellerybybarrie---I have a add-onto your home stereo system Panasonic 8 track player for sale. Comes with 30 or so country music 8 track cartridges STILL NEW in the wrapper.
I think my favorite videos that you create Mat, are the ones where you review portable music devices. I found this video to be particularly enjoyable! Keep old media alive is a noble thing! That GE 8 Track Boom Box is a beauty... and that 1st LED just magically started working! Thanks again.
@Techmoan In case it breaks again you might have missed a screw on the lamp cover. Looks like there's a horizontal one on the piece of plastic covering the bulbs: it's visible at 21:08.
A much more successful "two speaker detachable" 8-track portable stereo design is one I used to have back in the day - the Channel Master 6201. On this one, the speakers had a metal hinge, could detach from each other, and, for carrying, folded up into a kind of little suitcase. GE made a very similar model - the M8614A
I have a Montgomery Ward boombox with both a cassette and 8-Track w/ AM/FM/SW radio. I used an 8-Track-Cassette adapter to dub tapes. Another interesting topic; Why did so many big heavy early 1980s boomboxes had shortwave? It was a mystery to most young people of that time. Most never heard of it and didn't know how to tune shortwave and when I showed some, they didn't understand why the signals sounded the way they did. They were too spoiled by FM Stereo. Looking at some of their advertising, it seems like it was for jet-setting yuppie business people who wanted to listen to news and stock reports from home while out globetrotting. But I can assure you they were almost NEVER bought by those people for that purpose because the things were really heavy (with batteries) and they were too big/likely to get stolen, etc.
That Ward's "super" boombox sounds like the peak of the all-in-one portable systems. Perhaps you can post a link to a catalog photo? The Wards catalogs are online. You may have to enter the date and catalog page as good ol YT strips links from most comments. About the SW band: in most of the lower cost radios have just one range of SW tuner meant that it was very difficult to tune in any but the most powerful SW signals and the antenna was way too small to pull in the distance stations. It was more of a gimmick. If you really wanted to listen to shortwave in the good old days you needed something like the Zenith Transoceanic multiband radios and an outside antenna. I have several tube powered radios with AM & SW, and they receive nothing on the SW side. If I lived in NYC, San Francisco or London in 1947 I could have heard all kinds of nifty SW programs with those radios.
Another brilliant video, Mat. Makes me wish my parents hadn’t thrown out the eight tracks and the player they had in the late 70s, early 80s. I was too young to object even if I had seen them being chucked, though. I was far more upset to discover that my football cards had been deemed surplus to requirements.
Good stuff here. I have an 8-track player/recorder in my living room (Realistic) that works great. Wonderful memories - which is why I keep it running. Thanks for a great video on the repair. Always fun to watch you 'dig in' to fixing these things..
4:00 - With the name "Lear", the idle rich were likely the customers, not "partiers". 16:25 - Pot scrubbers or brillo pads with WD40 do well on rusted springs.
My uncle who’s probably closer to your age has a 8 track player with a ton of tapes as well, he also had a portable one he used to bring on camping trips, got into Boz Scaggs from this trip back in ‘81 when he was 21. His was silver and chrome, not sure what brand though. Mind you still consider him young for he’s 14 years older than me, mom’s youngest brother, her being the oldest. Love your channel I’m reminiscing now. ❤
Love the realism and practicality in your videos as well as you humour (don’t tell the miss I used her nail brush 😊 Hilarious I do have an 8 track somewhat similar to the one that comes apart but now I am going to hunt for a similar one to the one you liked. I did not even know they existed, so as always thanks much for your tireless education and research
When the light went on, I was like _"Wait, it's working now for some reason? Will he notice?"_ and so he did. It's a happy if inexplicable occasion when things you thought were broken just start working again for no good reason.
When re-gluing a plastic post as you have done here, a zip tie around it is handy to clamp it, and may be trimmed and left on unless it interferes with some other protrusion.
I use a copper tube of a right size. Maybe it's a bit too much but it's a definitive repair.
If the screw is loose (thread ripped), just stick a wooden toothpick before screwing it back!
I have had good luck with using fiberglass mesh drywall tape that i had lying around as reinforcement on plastic things i thought would never hold up for gluing and it has worked surpricingly well, i usually use it with cyanoacrylate glue, i would totally glue that around that post. I just put the tape on and cover it with glue. Im a pro in electronic repairs but i came up with this method on my own by chance, its just something i have used for my own things at least so far and it would be more of a last resort solution in a pro scenario. Using zip tie may certainly be a good option as well in this case, the fiberglass mesh is great in that it can be adapted to reinforce many different shapes of objects as well, you can take off single strands etc.
an alternative to zip ties i use is heatshrink tubing! once you first glue the broken post together, you wet its surface by cyanoacrylate and quickly slide the heatshrink on it and heat it up. The combination of tightly shrunken tubing and superglue makes it nice and sturdy! if there's enough room surrounding the post you can do it twice to make it even more solid
@@andrealotito4412 That's a really good idea! I'm gonna have to remember that!
You haven't listened to Bob Dylan until you have heard him on the original 8-track. And you haven't heard that unless it was through a failed Learjet product with dodgy belts.
It sounded like a parody of a drunk wedding singer.
@@mykelevangelista6492…so, like every Dylan song?
6:08 you just switch the radio on and it's playing "Gimme Shelter". I love it
New Techmoan videos hit like 80's Saturday morning cartoons for us western folk.
Or, for some of us, ‘60s Saturday morning cartoons. 🤓
It's almost like the GE machine actually WANTED to work normal again. The one part you can't get to decides to fix itself. Very nice!
I'm going to go against the grain, but I believe the Lear Jet Stereo 8 is the real "diamond in the rough" device here. I'm sure it would require quite the restoring to get it back to it's intended condition, but comparatively speaking, I'm way more impressed with the engineering of the Lear Jet. Full disclosure, I knew Bill Lear, I was his attorney's son, and I had a friend who had this same machine. The intended design of the machine was to leave it in a semi-permanent location, like a dorm-room. Then, you detached the one speaker and took the player as a single-speaker player. There's missing hardware that would secure the two sides together and would separate by pressing that button on the side. I believe this unit was originally sold as early as the late 60s, which makes it considerably older than the GE, which appears to me to be a Sanyo OEM, and probably has a lot of the electronics shared with a cassette version. Don't get me wrong, if I wanted an 8-track 'boombox' to listen to, I would go with the GE. I just appreciate the engineering that went into the Lear Jet. Great video!
Just read his profile...interesting man with an unbelievable story.
My condolences, although he's been gone a long time.
I occasionally tinker with electronics myself and this video gave me that warm feeling again, from when you've really not done anything specific to the light, but it just decides to start working again. Love it!
Yes I think it was just oxidisation on a contact, so it cleaned off with a bit of use - always good when something like that happens.
@@Techmoansince it looks like neon bulbs, my bet is the one contact that’s activated on DC was too dirty but the other contact (only on AC do both activate) was fine. Since neons need a higher strike voltage than operating voltage, the higher resistance probably impeded that initial strike on DC. Hopefully once it ran a while on AC it got through any oxidation and will work on DC!
@@kaitlyn__L Not much chance they are neons. Incandescent bulbs with orange filters. This thing operates on 12V, neon lamps need 60-80V to strike. It was just a bad contact, it is common enough with low voltage stuff that a very faint layer of oxide/dirt will prevent any current flow, but if it's a wiping contact, some usage might just clean that unwanted layer off.
@@mrnmrn1 unless there’s proof of no capacitor boost circuit the battery native output voltage doesn’t mean much, neons were the most common indicator lamps and there’s the characteristic slight flicker when it’s powered from AC on the Jackery.
@@kaitlyn__L That would have been quite a Rube Goldberg approach to make a voltage booster just for the track display... I can't notice any flicker, only during track skip, and that is due to the contacts. BTW incandescent lamps do flicker slightly on AC, Mat probably used his camera in 50Hz mode, so any slight 60Hz flicker should be visible - I can't see any. The track display runs on DC most probably. The only benefit of neon lamps in this application would be their longer lifespan, but if the goal is an orange glow like this, an underheated incandescent bulb works just fine, and has a lifetime that exceeds the lifetime of the tape transport.
Random sentimental thought, but when I heard "The Times They Are a-Changin'", I thought about my friend Brian.
He unfortunately passed away of a fentanyl overdose 4 years ago and they played that as everyone walked up to his casket at the funeral.
Thank you so much for the countless hours of entertainment!
I was so happy when bulb 1 started working just because you talked about it and wiggled the bit near it.
I'm a big fan of your videos. May I make a suggestion about measuring belt diameter? Fold the old belt so that it's flat on the table and straight, and measure the inside length in that position. Divide that reading by 1.57 and you have the actual diameter of the old belt. Then order one a tad smaller and you're good to go. This from an audio repair tech who's been fixing stereos since 1977.
thanks for the tip.
@@Techmoan You're welcome. Keep up the great content. I never miss your videos.
easy as Pi
I am curious where those numbers come from. Why 1.57 and the inside of the ring?
@@Smileyrat The circumference of a circle divided by π equals the diameter. Since we measure half the circumference (belt is folded), then we need to use half the π too (~3.14 / 2 = 1.57).
It isn't officially Saturday morning until I've watched the latest Techmoan video.
Saturday night for those of us in Australia, but yeah. It's part of my Saturday evening ritual 😊
I was about to say ‘is it Saturday already?!’ (Evening here in japan…)
Agreed.
An early morning cheers, indeed. ☕
Waking and baking with Mat here in the Hoosier state!
I love the style of this "boombox", nobody would expect an 8-track player in it.
I got the Panasonic stereo "Swiss cheese " player and the GE mono version of this one shown in the video. The mono sounds the best because it has a slightly bigger speaker. There is another version called the "loud mouth" like this.
Nobody expects the-
@@CantankerousDave Dead parrot, comfy chair, nigh nigh!. I don't know what?
@@CantankerousDave
- “Spanish Inquisition”!
@@stvlu733 I have one of those too! The GE Loudmouth and Blaster sound great as well.
I love that metallic blue color around the knobs on that first device. Gorgeous color blue, would look awesome on the right type of vintage sports car.
Hi. In America, we had one just like that Branded for a chain over hear. Western Auto. 8D cells. Thank you. Was about 72. My mom's. She died in 75. Didn't get to use it long. Thank you for the memory. 8 tracks. Cool sir😁😜♥️
Ah, Western Auto, they were like a miniature Sears. Very popular and successful in small towns that were not large enough to support a Sears store. FIrestone also had similar stores. The Firestone name was on all kinds of stuff not related to tires. I have two Firestone radios, one with a Voice 0f Music record changer.
That Lear-Jet model reminds me of my younger years at the beach as my neighbor had one. It spent many nights outside but each years it was there to entertain us. The simple 8-track mechanism was not affected by the sand they way cassette system were. Thanks!
One of the few good things about waking up at 4AM US time, is finding a fresh Techmoan video to make insomnia worth it!
On with the watching! 🤩
6pm out here in Asia already.
Let's watch the video at 7pm Korean time
The beauty of the 8-track system is you only ever had to listen to a maximum of 4 Bob Dylan tracks
Really like the look of the GE boombox, nice industrial design aesthetic.
Agreed. The orange accents really pop. Very appealing design.
My face lit up when the GE roared to life at 20:07 and sounded so loud and clear! I gasped out loud when I saw the light for Channel 1 flicker on for a split second at 23:54, did it start working again?! Brilliant! Thanks for the great video, it's so nice to see these machines getting restored and coming back to life!
You can always give ancient plastic parts like this one a soak with glycerin first and a silicone oil rubdown second. This works well against the plastic drying up and becoming brittle with fine cracks eventually.
Thanks for commenting re hydrating & protecting older plastics. Do you prefer a specific brand of glycerin and/or silicon oil? Is there any product that you’d avoid using? Thanks again!
@@HeyMJ. Not really, I just got the pure glycerin from the pharmacy, they'll fill little bottles for you. And silicone oil is available as a lubricant, should also be pure, at most with an evaporating solvent for use in a spray can.
Never heard of this technique before
@@SockyNoob Plastics tend to become brittle by losing evaporating additives, it's worst with flame retardant and soft parts.
Is this a treatment that can be applied to belts in plastic bags to prolong their life if they are i.e. likely they will be untouched for a long time before use?
Love the rare and obscure equipment demonstrated here, it's always an entertaining education watching this channel
Love the rare and obscure equipment demonstrated here, it's always an entertaining education watching this channel
When I saw the 1st program light coming up I really felt that it was a way of the device to say Thank You for bringing me back to life and for your kind words!
Great video as always mate keep up, cheers from Greece
Its all about that track 1 selection light.❤🎉
Techmoan’s reputation is so great that No. 1 light bulb knew it was going to work one way or another, so it just fixed itself.
the condition of the plastics or that all these buttons and lights still work astonish me!
Thanks to people like you we can still collectively actively remember these devices and continue to have them in our discourse, re-learning them and re-considering their values. This witness/memory duty is a really important part of our existence, I would dare think.
I think I realised my favourite musical genre is any music played at the wrong speed... it is glorious
I got right to about @11:28, and instantly agree. 🤣
😆
It always reminds me of Mark and Lard from Radio 1 back when it was actually worth listening to. Lard's Classic cuts.
"Is that record hard to find?" "In that condition, yes"
I started imagining Johnny Cash doing Bob Dylan Covers at one point!😁
Who knew that the 8-track 'program select' button would serve as a 'copyright strike avoidance' button decades later? Also, I love the blue anodized panel on the Learjet unit, that colour really 'pops'.
In another time, Techmoan would have been the perfect presenter on Tomorrow's World, or The Open University!!
I know, right? Techmoan definitely does have the Tomorrow's World or Open University type of presentation that I just love!
That light coming on on the #1 channel in the end means that it's happy that you restored it and that you're a #1.
P.S. what a great looking boombox that is.
I love the bit at 8:21 about matching batteries... 😂
Hail from Chicago.
I've had the honor of repairing an early Lear Jet automobile 8 track player.
Lear himself invented the eight track player. On an early model, It did not have a belt. The flywheel was mounted directly to the capstan that drove the tape and it was also the armature of the motor,it was direct drive.. It was a wonderful piece of engineering. Very heavy and industrial looking. I don't believe the unit was repairable, but to see it in use was a marvel in itself.made in the U.S.A.
It's always amazing to see how much more pleasing mechanical electrical devices were, compared to todays devices. Guess I'm getting old and nostalgic.. :)
what a delightful video, so happy that old belt worked and that light turned on! pure joy
General Electric radios from this era had some of the best AM tuners to be found in portables.
The track 1 indicator light was likely out due to oxidation of the mechanical track position switch linked to the tape head positioning mechanism. Operating it a few times scratched through the oxidation.
The reason the tape came out of the cart is that you were playing it upside down. This wasn't a problem with very early made carts because it had a mechanism inside that kept the tape spooled on the reel. Modern carts just mostly re-spool using a guide in the plastic of the tape housing and gravity to spool. If a tape is played upside down, it will unevenly spool and may even jam once it reaches the middle, causing a stuck tape.
Don't store your tapes upside-down if you are in a vehicle moving with vibrations, which also causes the tape to unspool. They can be left like this, maybe only for a very short while.
Bob Dylan too ... My parents had that same album on 8 Track!
These old devices you demo are just plain awesome. And the fact you get most of them back up and running is even more awesome!
I LOVE the the blue color of the knob panel.
Best I've ever heard Bob Dylan! Great stuff takes you right back
Competent yet down to earth as always, Mat. Very enjoyable. Loved the cynical pop at the 'ooh, you can't mix batteries' brigade! Extra points for the epoxy; I'm so tired of youtubers trying to repair structural elements with CA glue.
Love the light coming back on for no particular reason, always nice for the gremlins to throw you a bone!
I imagine the internal switch contacts were a little corroded and a few cycles through the track steps rubbed them clean just enough to work again.
At 21:05 you can see that there is also a black screw that attaches the black plastic you tried to remove to the front. The knob seems to go to the cog visible in the yellow-ish metal below that black plastic, it may not hinder you removing the black plastic once you loosened all three screws.
Edit: Well, as the light is magically working now, there is ofc no need to remove it anymore.
Tip about the knob that wouldn’t come off…sometimes there’s a setscrew in it in the end of the raised section, usually opposite the side with the indicator arrow.
Matt, one thing I'd really suggest for prying is picking up some of those plastic pry tools. There are ones made from glass fiber reinforced nylon, and they work great for popping things apart without marring plastic! I want to say Menda made the ones I have, but there are others.
Also, for some reason the design of that General Electric model seems very familiar to me. I know they did some other ones in similar designs, but I can't for the life of me remember where I saw them.
A guitar pick works as well or an old credit card
@@BLUE_OCTOBER-TRIX indeed they do, especially the fake cards they used to mail out
As an old school B-Boy, I would have happily carried that RCA 3-5531A Boombox, as me and my crew carried our rolled up canvas/cardboard, down to the shopping centre, to bust some moves. 😃
Love a Saturday morning with a cuppa and A Techmoan video upload, so relaxing.
B-Boys will always be boys!! Respect, peace and love!
Not RCA, But General Electric
The Learjet unit reminds me of one I used in grade school as a child. And I suspect that’s the most common market where a teacher would set it up for the classroom and not move it much throughout the day/week/semester depending on the class. It wasn’t really portable as much as presentational. I could see that similar to a slide presentation stereo.
I do like a clean and nicely polished knob
Yes, that olive drab, military hardware look was very popular in the late 70s. Every piece of portable audio equipment had that styling. I remember it well. Oddly, it's hard to come by now. I've looked for it in the usual places like ebay but I rarely see examples of it
@techmoan Hey Mat! I find it funny you give the twits any time by bringing up the fact that you put the right speaker on the left side accidentally. You should just let them stew in their own juices. Those of us like me thoroughly enjoy your videos BECAUSE of who you are!
Please keep them coming! This takes me back to when I’d ride around with my dad in those old trucks he used to drive, delivering paint and whatnot. Please take care and have a great rest of your weekend!
Maybe I did not pay attention much but in this video it seems you added a lot more visual effects than usual. I really liked panning accross the buttons in 6:01 and showing unusual angels like the bathroom sink at 22:36 I think there were more pannings and they make the video more lively so keep going Mat
A boombox with an 8 track player that's so frigging cool. Your channel has reignited my passion for "old school" audio equipment (particularly boomboxes). Have so many fond memories of using them
A fiberglass pen cleans up battery contacts well, also, winding string around the back of a knob will lift it off without damaging the plastic surface.
When you’re sure that a knob has to be removed and your fingernails or screwdriver aren’t up to it, try a pulling on the loose ends of a shoelace fully wrapped around the shaft. The pulling force mostly acts in the direction of OFF. A flat sports lace for very difficult removals has worked for me (thanks to the tape-heads forum who helped me when the big flat knobs on my Revox reel2reel tape recorder wouldn’t budge. Thanks Matt!
Ooh, got a Varta battery in there. Best get that sorted!
These repair videos are always great, I always really appreciate how you keep things in chronological order rather than just saying it needs a new belt, here’s one I ordered earlier. Regardless of if the thing under repair works at the end it’s a joy to see inside these machines with you!
We used to make a concoction of cleaning agent for plastics when we had a computer shop back then. It's just a combination of Wipe Out and Denatured Alcohol. It cleans the discoloration of plastics like that. We use it on CRT monitors. My older brother taught me about that because thats what they use in the company where he works. They service big companies (they are one of the official service center of IBM) that uses POS, computers, typewriters etc. that has plastic housing on the machines
GE carried quality electronic products in those days. I found a GE 1985 19" TV at a antique store that I just plugged in and worked with just a few adjustments to the pots inside to bring back the picture brightness. Was made in Indiana but was close to the last few TV models made in the US. I have not found any GE products from the 80's with leaking caps yet, knock on wood.
I love the look of that Lear Jet 8-track.
Love that GE! Both units could probably use a drop of light oil on the motor bearings.
Well, that's my Saturday night sorted 😁 A new Techmoan video is one of the highlights of the weekend these days.
General Electric made (or had made) a lot of cool portable audio players in the seventies and eighties. 99% plastic. I had several GE cassette AM-FM portable units but now I gotta try to find an 8-track stereo by GE. If they are in good condition they are no longer cheap. Thanks for showing this model. The other two pale in comparison.
When these portable 8-Track players were new they were noted as battery-eaters because of the excess friction of tape feeding from the center. That also made tape breakage more likely. When cassettes came along everyone was more than happy to abandon the 8-Track, and portable players would play 3- 4 times the music off the same set of batteries.
It was very common for 8-tracks to sound like that even when there was nothing wrong with them but we used to do is wedge a matchbook with the 8-track cartridge until it sounded correct usually done the trick
I’ve heard of that trick to fix misaligned tapes and stop bleed-in from the other programs. Does it work for speed issues too?
Yes I added my message before I realized there was an elastic rubber band for a belt
I guess not really for speed? You know what I cannot really remember to be honest. It was a long time ago
@@Dave01Rhodes I think he's referring to the pressure pad. They were a piece of foam or felt that's job was making sure the tape properly contacts the playback head. If the foam denigrates with age (And they often do) it can cause crosstalk (multiple tracks playing at once) or loss of audio quality. Has nothing to to do with speed issues thought, If you're having those, it's caused by the player.
Hello Mat. Thanks, as always, for a very entertaining video. Must say I'm glad to see you looking so well - you're obviously looking after yourself properly...which I'm happy about. We, your audience, value your work hugely and would like to see many many more interesting videos in the future! Take care.
We had one that speakers that snap together like the one you have but smaller with six inch speakers which sounded quite good because they were insulated well and you could set them 8 feet apart This one had a feature I've never seen anywhere else, it was able to record on to 8 track tapes. We were able to get a blank 8 track tape from Radio Shack, and that was also the brand name that was on the 8-track player. Radio Shack was the go to store for electronics in the 70s and 80s. Great Video.
Takes me back to the late 70s driving my dad's car with Bob Dylan on the quadrophonic eight track player ( had four speakers)
Yeah, but what was the car? Fun Fact: On 15th September 1965, the Ford Motor Company became the first automaker to offer an eight-track tape player as an option for their entire line of vehicles on sale in the US.
Those GE boomboxes really were the last great 8 track players in my opinion. They were built like absolute tanks and you still see a ton on eBay from what I remember.
As always, very interesting videos.
When looking through electronics sections of catalogs from stores like Radio Shack, Penneys, Sears, Wards and countless others (Im sure the UK had their equivalents) Im amazed at the variety of models!!! Always wondered where these designs came from as they varied from store to store. There were name brands like Sony, GE, RCA, etc, store brands, and then just generic names.
When this stuff was being made it all came from factories in Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore or Hong Kong. The 8-track mechanism came from just a few factories, the electronics were very similar, but the thing that set them apart was the exterior design. Plastic production had replaced most wood or metal and thus, even before computer modeling, it was quite easy to customize the audio devices. There was a never ending array of faceplates, knobs, buttons, switches, etc, all in lovely chromed plastic. Many models changed exterior appearance every year, but the stuff inside was mostly the same. All Radio Shack (Realistic) audio stuff can be found with other brand names, but often with very different cosmetics.
What a happy happy machine….I couldn’t believe it when that number one light came on…I actually did a little dance round my kitchen! The only thing I’m surprised about was your Luke warm response to this miracle, I would have rang all my family and mates, sent a letter to parliament and probably one to Father Christmas then built a glass case for the machine, put it on public display with a big red arrow pointing at the number one button! Rob
It’s funny how the songs playing on the various radio stations were time appropriate.
I wasn’t aware 8 track was a thing in a compact boombox design especially so late in the 70’s.Thanks for the video.👍
Your videos have the best outro soundtrack on TH-cam and with that Six Million Dollar Man computing sound at the end, it’s just brilliant. Never change it.
The "Lear Jet" design/concept reminds me of the Hitachi TRQ 233s portable cassette player I had as a teenager in the late 1970s. It was from the early 1970s and had detachable flip out speaker "doors". That really looked like a "proto boombox"!
The Lear Jet logo is soooo cool. That player is wonderful.
Continuing to love your videos !!
When I was in America,back in 1980, I remember seeing that model 8 Track/radio you featured in this video ,there was also a boombox with a Cassette recorder,as well as 8 track on sale at Montgomery Ward !!
The Yorx K6061?
Montgomery Ward model GEN3995 has both cassette and 8 track, built like a tank. I think GE was the manufacturer.
I have an excellent condition Radio Shack Concertmate 8 that I use around the house for portable music. It just needed some cleanup when I picked it up off eBay including cleaning old sticky grease off the mechanism that switches tracks (along with a little bit of lube). I noticed a lot of similarities to the internals of that GE portable. I know RS rarely made its own equipment but rather had it made by others, sometimes as just a re-badge. The track indicator lights are driven by leaf switches that ride on a cam on the track change mechanism. I suspect the suddenly working Track 1 light was from exercising the switch a few times.
Cool. Yes, Radio Shack stuff was made to their specifications, but all of it came from major Asian, British or German manufactures, so your Concertmate was likely available in several other brands with slightly different cosmetics.
this is great. it's good to see you back to exploring old audio/video devices. it's really my favorite kind of video you do!
Another outstanding show. Thank you. Not sure how you can tell if something's not playing right by using Bob Dylan though! Poor Bob 😂
Bob has built in wow and flutter:)
Bob Dylan's the perfect test for 8-tracks. If the singing is in tune, with a consistent tempo; then you know something's wrong with the player.
@@gwishart 🤣 brilliant!
@@peterlarkin762 🤣 True! And he's not done bad for himself 😃
@@peterlarkin762 😮 It's Gonna Be A SAD💔 Day when Bob D.😇 Passes Away😔🥇💤🌟🙏🌀
Brings back memories. As a kid I used to look at the Allied Radio and Lafayette Radio catalogs and dream about getting a 8-track portable. My dad vetoed it and since he held the pursestrings I never got one. Good things come to those who wait as several years later I had a component stereo system and my folks got me a Wollensak 8-track recorder for Christmas. I think I was about 13 or 14. My first car at sixteen was the perfect opportunity to experience my own tapes on the go. The thing that bugged me most was the track change which would either require expert planning in my recordings or, as I came to prefer due to ease, just let it segue right into the next track with that little glitch in continuous sound. By the time I graduated high school I had to have a cassette though and I got a Pioneer Supertuner one which was pretty good. I actually still love cassettes for probably nostalgic reasons and the fact they were mini reel-to-reels which before all the portable stuff I had a Wollensak 4-track 1/4" recording deck in my component system. There's just something about making your own tapes. Anyone in the US remember Burstein & Applebee Electronic Company? They specialized in parts and close-outs so I got that reel to reel when I was about 12 from them. Those electronic catalogs were my personal Sear's Wish Books! I definitely enjoyed this trip down 8-track memory lane.
11:29 Neat, it even comes with an auto-anti-copyright-strike feature! How forward-thinking!
That is similar to how my Dad's reel to reel tape recorder from the 60s had speakers attached. They did latch on better, buy you had to hide the wires inside every time you put it back together. It did sound pretty good though.
23:51 Who else got excited when the Channel 1 light suddenly started working? 😁👍
I'm pleased that light fixed itself, I had a hunch it was some sort of mechanical switch playing up & a bit of percussive maintenance would fix it!
The GE one feels like it could happily be a piece of military equipment. Great repairs, well done 👍
Love the look of that GE.
As a kid from the seventies, I love anything with an orange accent, it matches the grey nicely on this machine.
Brilliant video as usual, I never got into 8 track (although we had a stereo at home with a player/recorder) and I think one of the cars we had did have a player in the early seventies but not as standard. Considering 8 track was designed to go into Leer Jets originally, its amazing how popular they became. I might have to look at getting either a car one or finding a recorder to add to the home system I have just to be completist... That will please the wife no end.....
Jewellerybybarrie---I have a add-onto your home stereo system Panasonic 8 track player for sale. Comes with 30 or so country music 8 track cartridges STILL NEW in the wrapper.
11:34 That's perfect, you don't even need to worry about content id matches
I think my favorite videos that you create Mat, are the ones where you review portable music devices. I found this video to be particularly enjoyable! Keep old media alive is a noble thing! That GE 8 Track Boom Box is a beauty... and that 1st LED just magically started working! Thanks again.
@Techmoan In case it breaks again you might have missed a screw on the lamp cover. Looks like there's a horizontal one on the piece of plastic covering the bulbs: it's visible at 21:08.
A much more successful "two speaker detachable" 8-track portable stereo design is one I used to have back in the day - the Channel Master 6201. On this one, the speakers had a metal hinge, could detach from each other, and, for carrying, folded up into a kind of little suitcase. GE made a very similar model - the M8614A
I have a Montgomery Ward boombox with both a cassette and 8-Track w/ AM/FM/SW radio. I used an 8-Track-Cassette adapter to dub tapes.
Another interesting topic; Why did so many big heavy early 1980s boomboxes had shortwave? It was a mystery to most young people of that time. Most never heard of it and didn't know how to tune shortwave and when I showed some, they didn't understand why the signals sounded the way they did. They were too spoiled by FM Stereo.
Looking at some of their advertising, it seems like it was for jet-setting yuppie business people who wanted to listen to news and stock reports from home while out globetrotting. But I can assure you they were almost NEVER bought by those people for that purpose because the things were really heavy (with batteries) and they were too big/likely to get stolen, etc.
That Ward's "super" boombox sounds like the peak of the all-in-one portable systems. Perhaps you can post a link to a catalog photo? The Wards catalogs are online. You may have to enter the date and catalog page as good ol YT strips links from most comments.
About the SW band: in most of the lower cost radios have just one range of SW tuner meant that it was very difficult to tune in any but the most powerful SW signals and the antenna was way too small to pull in the distance stations. It was more of a gimmick. If you really wanted to listen to shortwave in the good old days you needed something like the Zenith Transoceanic multiband radios and an outside antenna. I have several tube powered radios with AM & SW, and they receive nothing on the SW side. If I lived in NYC, San Francisco or London in 1947 I could have heard all kinds of nifty SW programs with those radios.
Another brilliant video, Mat. Makes me wish my parents hadn’t thrown out the eight tracks and the player they had in the late 70s, early 80s. I was too young to object even if I had seen them being chucked, though. I was far more upset to discover that my football cards had been deemed surplus to requirements.
😮🗿Did You Remember to
Thank Yer Parents?¿?¿😵‼️💔😠☠️
Sounds like my stepfather. He hated anything that wasn't his. Can't tell of the things he that he thought was trash, If it wasn't his that is.
I like to think Mat goes to lots of local dance battles and that’s why he is always after the next best boombox!
Also explains that vinyl boombox lol
Good stuff here. I have an 8-track player/recorder in my living room (Realistic) that works great. Wonderful memories - which is why I keep it running. Thanks for a great video on the repair. Always fun to watch you 'dig in' to fixing these things..
4:00 - With the name "Lear", the idle rich were likely the customers, not "partiers".
16:25 - Pot scrubbers or brillo pads with WD40 do well on rusted springs.
My uncle who’s probably closer to your age has a 8 track player with a ton of tapes as well, he also had a portable one he used to bring on camping trips, got into Boz Scaggs from this trip back in ‘81 when he was 21. His was silver and chrome, not sure what brand though. Mind you still consider him young for he’s 14 years older than me, mom’s youngest brother, her being the oldest. Love your channel I’m reminiscing now. ❤
Love the realism and practicality in your videos as well as you humour (don’t tell the miss I used her nail brush 😊 Hilarious
I do have an 8 track somewhat similar to the one that comes apart but now I am going to hunt for a similar one to the one you liked. I did not even know they existed, so as always thanks much for your tireless education and research
Another wonderful episode. Very appreciated on a lazy Saturday morning. Thank you, Mat!
I actually got hyped when that #1 light went up! Wow, my Saturday is on fire 😂