by Rob-NYC »
Sun Jun 24, 2012 10:58 am
Rowe R90-93-4. these were also far better sounding for CD's in the Combo versions.
Best sounding CD machine was also the first, Seeburg's 1986 (SCD1) it did sometimes skip if the machine speakers were too loud, but was a revelation in terms of definition -way better than Rowe's early offering.
Of the silver age machines, the Wurlitzer 1800 when modded for a magnetic cart is by-far the best of the 50's era machines. For whatever reason, Wurlitzer used a very good cone tweeter and that combined with their distributed resonances in the woofers produced a very listenable machine without the typical headache booming of most others.
Honorable mention: AMI H-I-J-K come close if you add an efficient tweeter, mod the amp slightly and use a better pickup, although the GE is not too bad. AMI was the only co. that actually designed a separate enclosure for the woofer.
This may sound a bit disloyal given that I have 9 old Seeburg's on-location but, the stiffness of the woofers in an undamped box, poor original pickups and weak tweeters produces a rather tiring sound. With some modification they do become more enjoyable.
BTW: i had an agreement to buy a VMC for $200 back in fall 1989. The seller was an op in NJ. I didn't act fast enough, two weeks after we met he was beaten into a coma during a mugging when leaving one of his locations in a Jersey ghetto. He regained consciousness but suffered too much brain damage to function. I never heard from him again. He was in his mid-forties.
Rob/NYC
"If we believe absurdities, we shall commit atrocities" -- Voltaire