What is the difference between all the AIWA Compo Boxes?

Discussion in 'Chat Area' started by Mister X, Jan 25, 2018.

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  1. lupogtiboy

    lupogtiboy Well-Known Member

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    Erm.....good question! When I'm next at my storage container I'll try and find out!
     
  2. lupogtiboy

    lupogtiboy Well-Known Member

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    For anyone feeling flush, there is a Carryin' Compo on eBay at the moment for £550, item number 202702835354
     
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  3. Gonzo83

    Gonzo83 New Member

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    Hi everyone!

    I recently bought an Aiwa MiniCompo Series 22 for 50€, around 45£. C22, L22, P22 and R22, with the original rack. An authenthic bargain!

    [​IMG]
     
  4. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    That's beautiful Gonzo83 and you got a great deal. It really screams, custom made metal rack to update the stand.
     
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  5. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    I just found this cool ad from April 1980, they don't refer to it as "22". It's neat to see all of the little configurations.

    AIWA 22 April 1980.jpg
     
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  6. Mystic Traveller

    Mystic Traveller Well-Known Member

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    Yes, makes cosy atmosphere.
     
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  7. Gonzo83

    Gonzo83 New Member

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    Cool!

    What is the difference between the sets? For example SD-L22U, SD-L22BH, SD-L22K (like mine).
     
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  8. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    I was wondering the same thing Gonzo83, maybe it has to do with how everything is hooked together. I'll have to pull mine out and see if there's any differences.
     
  9. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    AIWA M-501 from 1982. I like the stand except for the round disc on the bottom, it's too bad they don't have something that doesn't look like it's 1970's kitchy. I might fab one for myself if I ever get some free time.

    AIWA M-501 1982.jpg
     
  10. nickeccles

    nickeccles Well-Known Member

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    I have that cassette deck!! :delighted:
     
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  11. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    Here's an AIWA Unicorn, the AIWA MDX-1000 Stereo Microcassette Deck with three heads. I don't know if this ever went into production, maybe Japanese Market only? I found this on the www.AmericanRadioHistory.com site in Hi Fi Review in an article about the 1981 Tokyo Audio Fair. It looks like it may be part of one of the compos, maybe the 80 series?

    Aiwa MDX-1000.png
     
  12. Mystic Traveller

    Mystic Traveller Well-Known Member

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    Wow, a pinnacle of Micro's format!
     
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  13. StaticAudio

    StaticAudio Active Member

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    I am very curious how Aiwa with that MDX-1000 has managed to get three heads and two capstans in the tiny space of a microcassette. A microcassette has only one hole for a capstan, the one in the middle; a standard compact cassette has one on each side so it is easier to create dual-capstan drive.
     
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  14. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    StaticAudio, interesting point, check out my thread on the JBR Microcasette Player. It does not record but it has a read head at the front of the tape to get any sound that might be ahead of a normal recording head. I'd love to see the AIWA Setup but I think it's do-able. I've been looking but so far this is the only information I've found on this unit.

    http://stereo2go.com/forums/threads/the-dragon-killer-microcassette-deck.3781/
     
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  15. StaticAudio

    StaticAudio Active Member

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    I think it's doable, although it all has to be pretty tiny.

    I'm guessing: Aiwa must have used the two holes left and right for the capstans, these are normally used to hold the cassette into position. The space where normally a pinchroller sits against the capstan can now be used for extra heads. The dual-capstan pinchrollers must be pretty small if you see the amount of space in a microcassette.

    I would love to see the Aiwa deck but I think it was only a demonstration of the capabilities of the engineers and has not gone into production., alas!
     
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  16. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    They tried really hard to make it look like it belonged together on a shelf.

    ETI 1979-12 December Aiwa.jpg
     
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  17. nickeccles

    nickeccles Well-Known Member

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    I said before - Such a golden age with staggering development especially home tape formats! As a cassette crazy teenager I really can't foresee a time like this ever happening again........
    Yes I love digital too, but in 1980 the cassette deck was really all we had & the ideas we saw & heard were extraordinary! Add the beautiful silver brushed ally fronted cassette decks with their led/vfd displays were from a time I will never forget!!
     
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  18. Longman

    Longman Well-Known Member S2G Supporter

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    Back from the days when music had value. Even a type zero cassette recorded from the Top 40 chart show had value requiring money for the tape, and effort to record it. I wonder how many teenagers in the 80s were there with their fingers on play and record waiting for their latest favourite song to be played during the Top 40, and hoping the DJ didn't talk over it too much.

    Recently a friends daughter, who was runner up on "The Voice" released a single. Although it is on iTunes I couldn't even buy the download from there. I did manage to buy her songs on Amazon, so hopefully she will get a few pence from that. What a college mate did in the 80s, going into a cheap studio, then getting 100 tapes duplicated was probably far more lucrative/

    Since reading Nick's post I was thinking how things have changed since the 80s or even the 90s. Back then, in the UK, water was unmetered - use and waste as much as you like - while buying a chart single on Vinyl or Cassette had significant cost. Now most peoples water is metered while the model for music is play as much as you like for a fixed monthly fee. I suspect that what the artists get per play is minimal.

    It also explains why gig tickets just keep going up and up.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-42982769

    At least CDs are still being made. After Marie Fredriksson's untimely death I discovered Roxette's first album Pearls of Passion and decided to buy it. Many other people must have decided to do the same thing as it was on back order on Amazon.
     
    Last edited: Dec 22, 2019
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  19. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    One of the best parts of cassette decks was the ability to record your friends or older siblings vinyl; back then a record, even at $7.99 USD, was unobtainable for a kid but everyone seem to have a cassette deck and blank tapes were cheap. And walking into a stereo store was magic, the manufactures knew they had to draw you in and they did it with more LEDs, big meters and the latest, greatest technologies, we used to love seeing all of this cool stuff where you always had to be tweeking something for that "perfect" sound.

    Yep, that area is long gone, stereos are still nice now but back then it was like cars, there was a new model every year, manufactures rarely rested on their TOTL, everything was upgraded year after year, when it went on sale, it wasn't coming back.
     
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  20. Longman

    Longman Well-Known Member S2G Supporter

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    During the 1970s when I was still at school I remember doing exactly that for a friend, using the microphone of my Mum's Sanyo radio cassette in front of the families Dansette record player. Then try to quietly close the lounge door and hope the milk lorry didn't go up the road outside :swoon.
    Thinking about it his family didn't even own a record player despite his Father having expensive cars like a DS23 and a Bristol.

    At around the same time as the recordings above I remember being taken to an open day at Oldbury Nuclear Power Station. The Electricity board had a stand showing all the latest products they sold including a top of the line Music Centre where you could see the woofers moving in time to the bass line which impressed me. Just a couple of years later I would go into Lasky's which was a UK chain of Hi Fi shops. The area where they displayed all the Hi Fi separates had subdued lighting in order to show off all the lights on the equipment. Back then the myth was that the slower and softer the eject on a cassette deck the higher the quality.
     
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