With the astronomical prices of Sony Walkmans, especially the desirable ones (looking at you D6C and TC-D5), I'm looking to purchase some in Japan. I am already aware that Akihabara might have some, though I would appreciate any advice regarding specific locations within Japan. Thanks in advance.
If you are in Akihabara look for "radio museum store " (a little hard to find this store). The store is in Akihabara and on the 2nd floor of a building under railroad bridge! This is the best store in Tokyo for vintage electronics. https://www.japanistry.com/radio-center/
Good luck! I haven't been there for two years but I searched high and low. The store Boodokhan mentions has some great stuff but I didn't see any bargains, I was looking at a Marantz CRS-400 and it was over $300 USD, definately not a bargain and maybe on the high side of pricing. I saw maybe 10 portables while I was there and nothing came home with me. We all wish it looked like this over there. https://stereo2go.com/forums/thread...-took-pics-of-stuff-he-could-not-afford.7106/ Here's my thread from two trips https://stereo2go.com/forums/threads/mister-x-does-tokyo.3711/ I'd go to any Hard Offs, there's a lot of them, 2nd electronic stuff. https://www.hardoff.co.jp/shop/detail/?p=101062 Manhattan Records in Shibuya, there's a ton of trendy stores (and records) in this area but you really have to look, they had boomboxes buried in a corner of cool old stuff. https://manhattanrecords.jp/ I never found Dubby Mad, I think it's across the alley from Manhattan Records but it was closed when I was there, I think they are down for the count. https://www.facebook.com/people/Boombox-Japan/100069180170314/ Design Underground, sometimes a store front pops up, mostly boomboxes. https://www.dug-factory.com/ This was updated this year, it looks like he has a permanent storefront. https://www.dug-factory.com/shibuya-base/ Akihabara under the bridge, I don't think this is the same spot as above, it looks really new https://home.akihabara.kokosil.net/en/archives/22512 This guy just updated his website!!!! Some of these look like they are mostly boomboxes http://www.video-koubou-topaz.jp/radio-boombox-mini-museum.html The Waltz, tons of cassettes, boomboxes and a handful of portables. These tend to be very nice and priced accordingly. https://waltz.business.site/ Another thrift store chain https://wakaba-shop.jp/ This place looks promising! I think it's by the Waltz? https://kan7hobby-com.translate.goog/?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-US&_x_tr_pto=wapp I did a lot of walking and one of my sidekicks speaks Japanese but it was difficult, nobody was pointing at different stores. I'm hoping to go back very soon, I'll check this thread for ideas. Another thing you might want to do is look up equipment for sale over there, outside of Yahoo, other sites will pop up, some are for brick and morter stores, I'd put a list of those together as well
Post photos if you go! I was hoping to get a personal list for myself if I go soon. My buddy might move back here anytime so I want to go for a last time. Check out DevilCraft Pizza there, it's outstanding if you like deep-dish and craft beer, some of the food in Akihabara can be touristy, this place hits it out of the park. https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaur..._Kanda-Chuo_Tokyo_Tokyo_Prefecture_Kanto.html and now you have me looking on Yahoo Auctions, I try to keep my eyes off of it, too much eye candy.....
When I travel, I love walking, sometimes 15+ miles a day, and I get to see a ton of stuff. Other then that I dig ditches all day at work so kicking back on the computer at night is relaxing for me and I tend to go down rabbit holes of information. Hopefully I can get back over there soon and give an update.
If you want Sony D6C I have one for sale with parts (like rubbers etc) and power supply. It should be serviced as I wasn't playing it much. If you are interested write me pm.
I was there in April and I'm afraid I didn't buy a single cassette Walkman. One shop (maybe Hard Off) had a nice blue WM-DD but it was priced high, in a glass cabinet, with some v expensive sealed Sony cassettes. As suggested, phones, laptops, headphones, Bluetooth speakers, proliferate. 2nd hand laptops were bargain priced. I had hoped for bargain bins full of WM-EX610 and similar, MD Walkman, discman, digital cameras maybe... In Akihabara I bought a load of Sony mp3 Walkman, ipods, sold for 'junk' as they say ie. untested. I found a few sealed cassettes and minidiscs in osaka. Also the big electronics stores still stock blank Sony minidisc. I concluded that I was about 20 years too late! Still had an amazing trip and suffered withdrawal symptoms ever since.
The Sony mp3 Walkman worked, but a couple were JDM and the menus couldn't be set to English. I kept one of those anyway as it was loaded with interesting JPop. The ipods all had v low batteries. Not sure any of the devices had firewire..
I happen to have a new-in-box Sony NW-E99 for sale. Can’t play MP3s directly, these need to be converted via SonicStage or something similar.
Used to be, buying from Japan was the best kept secret in game/anime/retro electronics collecting. Back in the 2010s, why you could buy a bulk lot of old Walkmans for a price low enough to make anyone raise an eyebrow. But see, that was it, it was a *secret*.... not so anymore! Buying online from Japan has seen a massive spike in the US and the UK since lockdown began, and it was during this time that the cat was let out of the bag. YouTubers rushed to their ring lights to talk all about getting high end vintage gear for pennies on the dollar, and pretty soon the well was dry. Not to mention, collecting 'Showa era' goods is now really trendy in Japan, so some of the price increases are not from outside influences, but rather nostalgia in Japan for the Showa era retro tech. So astronomical prices are persistent even over in Japan. Akihabara by nature is one of the most expensive places to find games and tech (look at travel vlogs), and YouTubers such as 'The Retro Future" have found really good prices by looking at rural local shops. Long story short, buying online from Japan is no longer such a good thing as it once was, and you must be well-versed in Japan's geography to know where to find honest shops willing to sell at reasonable prices. Techmoan put it best... "If you are looking to buy something from Japan you just can't get in the UK, it's a good option, but if you are trying to find a deal on something, VAT and shipping is libel to be an issue." (BTW, eBay and Yahoo auctions for Walkmans usually end significantly lower than BIN prices... even in the US, so the best bet is to bid, rather than to buy it now.)
I tried to bid on a couple of Aiwa walkman from aleado.com in Japan. Aleado is some sort of English/international front end for Yahoo Auctions in Japan. The site says to contact Aleado by email prior to one's first bid. It appears there is a requirement to have the funds to cover a winning bid plus shipping, in your PayPal account before you are allowed to place a bid. No one answered two emails requesting that arrangenents be made so I could bid. No workaround I tried succeeded. I did find that shipping, which is listed in the auctions, could range from reasonable to extremely costly. Like $150 for a walkman from Japan to North America. I also found PayPal takes a week or so to register deposit of funds, by which time most auctions end. So one would have to keep sufficient funds in PayPal to cover possible purchases. I couldn't find a way to see what finished auctions had for sale price, as one can on eBay. I'm no longer on the hunt for the walkman, but does anyone know how to navigate Aleado?
I wouldn't use Aleado... it's very old and outdated as far as logistics go. Having the funds in an account before bidding is normal, but nowadays with modern PayPal, it's no longer the merchant's responsibility, but rather PayPal's to work it out with you if your payment was declined for some reason. Also, the shipping cost doesn't seem correct either. I've sent over 50 parcels containing items from Japan last year, and I never paid over $60 for shipping on smaller products like Discmans and Walkmans. Again, I think Aleado is just really outdated and this is how they CYA if a purchase didn't work out in their favor. I use Buyee. It's incredibly seeker friendly, and for beginners, it's a god send. First of all, you can contact a live support agent 9 to 5 JST instead of using slow email. Second, you can just register a credit card instead of PayPal and you'll be changed when and if you win(they also manage PayPal the same way). Finally, shipping is very transparent and by using the shipping calculator and easy to read listings, you can pretty much know how you'll be charged. They send you frequent updates about your parcels, allow you to add protective padding and consolidate to save on Shipping, plus you can use other markets aside from Yahoo, like Mercari. Buyee, Sendico, Jauce... these are all really good proxies that nowadays leapfrog Aleado.
This site has recently come up in my searches, I have never used it or know if it is trustworthy. The listings seem to be easier to navigate then the other sites (which I also haven't used). https://www.fromjapan.co.jp/usa/jp/
Thanks for the advice. I should have posted the question here before giving up on getting a unit from Japan.