The record sides were sequenced for use with a record changer ( 1 / 6, 2 / 5, 3 / 4 ).
22.
This factory listed as its product line; television sets & combinations, radios, record changers, refrigerators, ranges, freezers, air conditioners, dehumidifiers and stereophonic phonographs.
23.
This professional record changer was marketed under the Voice of Music trademark, and also sold to other manufactures such as Sherwood, Philco Ford and Westinghouse.
24.
This record changer had a twenty-four pole synchronous motor, and a separate motor for operating the tone arm and lowering the record to the turntable.
25.
This " drop-automatic sequence " was designed for record changers which simply dropped records rather than reversing the stack as it was played in sequence.
26.
On June 24, 1952, Lincoln patented a vacuum-operated record changer capable of changing records of various dimensions including 78s, 33S ! rpm, 16 speed and 45s.
27.
V-M mass-produced record changers, like their competitors mass-produced record changers, were used in low to medium priced audio equipment-compact stereo systems, console stereos, and portable stereo systems.
28.
V-M mass-produced record changers, like their competitors mass-produced record changers, were used in low to medium priced audio equipment-compact stereo systems, console stereos, and portable stereo systems.
29.
The first commercially successful record changer was the " Automatic Orthophonic " model by the Victor Talking Machine Company, which was launched in the United States in 1927.
30.
Like other mass-produced record changers, the tone arms had heavier vertical tracking force ( VTF ), poorer speed accuracy, and poorer rumble specification than the professional record changers.