The changer mechanism, responsible for operating the tone arm and the dropping of the records, was updated throughout the years to keep V-M's record changers competitive with their competitors, as technology advanced.
42.
These mass-produced record changers, while competitive with other manufactures mass-produced record changers, i . e . BSR and Garrard, in both build quality and product specifications, were not competitive with professional record changers.
43.
These mass-produced record changers, while competitive with other manufactures mass-produced record changers, i . e . BSR and Garrard, in both build quality and product specifications, were not competitive with professional record changers.
44.
These mass-produced record changers, while competitive with other manufactures mass-produced record changers, i . e . BSR and Garrard, in both build quality and product specifications, were not competitive with professional record changers.
45.
Although I never heard a record changer I would have been happy to live with, I've encountered several carousel-type, multi-CD players that sound remarkably good, even in the revealing light of a high-performance system.
46.
Later this year, Wurlitzer plans to roll out a model that looks like an old-fashioned rainbow-colored jukebox on the outside but replaces the mechanical CD or record changer on the inside with an off-the-shelf computer.
47.
V-M's second generation professional record changers design was developed in 1971, and was sold to BIC . V-M's deteriorating financial condition did not permit V-M to market this design under the Voice of Music trade mark.
48.
While working as an editor for the book publishers Simon & Schuster, Keepnews moonlighted as editor of " The Record Changer ", a small jazz magazine, after fellow Columbia graduate Bill Grauer became its owner in 1948.
49.
"In the early days, when I couldn't afford to hire someone to copy the parts for my own compositions, I used to do the copying while listening to a stack of LPs on an old record changer, " he said.
50.
Wurlitzer's success was due to a first rate marketing department ( headed by future Indiana Senator Homer Capehart ), the reliable Simplex record changer, and the designs of engineer Paul Fuller who created many cabinet styles in the " lightup " design idiom.