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Stereo receiver radio shack
Stereo receiver radio shack









  1. STEREO RECEIVER RADIO SHACK BLUETOOTH
  2. STEREO RECEIVER RADIO SHACK SERIES
  3. STEREO RECEIVER RADIO SHACK TV

The “Radio Shack” was the official term for the room onboard ships where radio operators communicated with others ships and the various ports that they operated out of. RadioShack was started in Boston by two brothers in 1921 with the goal of supporting the growing number of people who were operating ham radios, and radio officers on ships.

STEREO RECEIVER RADIO SHACK TV

RadioShack’s infamous house brand that was sold next to the pulsating disco balls, wire strippers, and TV antenna. One brand that never crossed my radar was Realistic. The Realistic Patrolman SW-60 and the Realistic CB-60 are similar in overall appearance but cover different sets of bands.When I got started a few years ago and began my vintage audio journey, I did a lot of reading and research about Marantz, Pioneer, Harmon Kardon, Sansui, Nakamichi, and high-end brands like McIntosh and Revox. The DX-60 existed in two versions, model 12-764 and a nearly identical but production-cost-reduced 12-764A. The radio receives 3 MHz to 27 MHz AM shortwave in three bands, 26.965 MHz through 27.405 MHz HF CB in one band, 540 kHz to 1620 kHz standard AM broadcast in one band, and 87 MHz to 108 MHz monaural standard broadcast FM. The Realistic DX-60 is a multiband radio. However, this degree of separation is not as great or as flexible as that of truly discrete quadraphonic sound. The effect is a greater degree of separation that stereo sound, as the listener is able to hear echoes, applause, and other ambient sounds from behind (as opposed to in-front and thus out-of-phase with the main speakers and inaudible), even with stereo recordings. Quatravox was the name of Realistic's synthesized four-channel output version of quadraphonic sound, which used Hafler circuitry to reproduce ambient sounds recorded by the microphones 180° out-of-phase with the intended recording (sounds recorded from opposite the microphone from the performers, i.e., studio echo, audience noise, etc.) and play them back through the rear loudspeakers out-of-phase with the main loudspeakers.

STEREO RECEIVER RADIO SHACK BLUETOOTH

Realistic enjoyed a short-lived return to RadioShack's stores in 2016 with a line of wireless bluetooth speakers and wireless noise-canceling bluetooth headphones. Rear of a Realistic Hi-Fi system with Quatravox output Both Realistic and Optimus brand names were retired in 2000 after RadioShack entered an agreement with RCA to market their products. In the early 1990s, the Realistic brand began to change its name to Optimus, a brand of speakers RadioShack had been offering since the 1970s. These included record players, stereo receivers, cassette decks, ham radios, musical synthesizers and a few quadraphonic receivers and shortwave radios. A very wide range of products was marketed under the Realistic brand. They are also the company responsible for the Realistic Mach speaker line.

stereo receiver radio shack

Also notable were their 8-track tape recorders under the TR- model line and their compact cassette decks under the SCT- model line. A 1977 motion picture entitled Handle with Care was sponsored at the time by Tandy Corporation, in part to showcase the line.

stereo receiver radio shack

STEREO RECEIVER RADIO SHACK SERIES

The company's most notable products under the Realistic brand included the extensive line of TRC series Citizens Band radio transceivers, which dominated the CB Radio market during the 1970s, and included the Navaho series of CB base station units. The brand began in 1954 under the name realist, but was subsequently changed due to a prior camera trademark, Stereo Realist.











Stereo receiver radio shack