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This comes up on the heels of this article by one of my favourite radio writers based in L.A.
He recalls two radios he really loved as a kid - both of which he wrecked by trying to make them better!
The one that fits the category in my case was a portable Koyo radio, a rare one in the 60s in that it had both AM and FM. This thing came everywhere with me - on Christmas car trips to Miami and all over my neighbourhood. At one point, I recall wrapping it with bungee cords to my bike so I could listen to CHUM or CKFH as I wheeled around the neighbourhood.
Those were great times and it was a great radio!
Except once. It's a bizarre story, but as you can see from the pic below, this radio had a cover with little holes to protect the speaker. One day, on the drive to Florida, I fell asleep on the thing while listening to it. When I woke up, my mother almost had a heart attack! My face was filled with pockmarks left by the tiny holes and it looked for all the world like a case of measles.
She started telling my father to find a hospital ASAP because she thought I was sick. In a few minutes, it dawned on all of us what happened and we had a good laugh out of it. But I never fell asleep directly on the speaker again!
(Notice the red lines on the dial - a remnant of the day when you were instructed to tune to either the 640 or 1240 frequency in the event of a nuclear or other attack, so the government could tell you what to do.)
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I don't remember the brand, but it was an 8 transistor radio. I got it for Christmas 1965. I am sure my parents bought it at the Dundas/Dixie Towers. My first DX catches in early 1966 were WBT and WBZ. Many more would follow.
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The first one I ever owned was this Sony, five transistor model.
I had a paper route for the Toronto Telegram and I won it for selling a certain number of new subscribers.
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Once I hit about 10 years old, it seems every Christmas there was a new Realistic (Radio Shack) AM, AM-FM, or walkie talkie set. I remember doing a five minute show over the walkie talkie, simulcasting the music from WKBW with my own voiceover. The FCC never sent the radio police.
However, my aunt's husband was the smartest. They were childless, so Uncle Don always had the latest AM-FM-public service band radio or two on the go, usually tuned to the Buffalo Police Department.
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When i was six, my grandparents gave me a Westinghouse AM Radio, as pictured here. I was surprised to find it.
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Panasonic’s Toot-A-Loop Radio (not sure if it was transistor, though; I was too young to know about those things!). We had a red one and a yellow one.
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Capricasix wrote:
Panasonic’s Toot-A-Loop Radio (not sure if it was transistor, though; I was too young to know about those things!). We had a red one and a yellow one.
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The very one! I may have even listened to CFTR on it.
Last edited by Capricasix (March 24, 2025 8:45 pm)