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Evie's Conquests

EvieSigma

Young ThinkPad Apprentice
I haven't gotten any Macs (or computers in general) lately, but for fans of old stereo equipment, I did pick this beauty up a few days ago:

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Much to my surprise, unlike the last ancient piece of Panasonic stereo equipment I picked up, this one actually works and won't cause an electrical fire!

 

EvieSigma

Young ThinkPad Apprentice
I've got an old Panasonic solid-state receiver from the late 60s with a seriously damaged plug, that made quite the nasty spark when its previous owner foolishly tried to plug it in. Need to get a new plug wire and plug for that one for sure.

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
You collect old stereo equipment then? I have a bunch of Technics gear from the 90's and 00's that I use (plus a Panasonic DAT unit because I could not find the Technics badged version).

I never cared much for old tube amps or record players but I do like high end tape decks for some reason (lived through that era I guess).

 

EvieSigma

Young ThinkPad Apprentice
That cassette/AM-FM combo and the receiver are all I've got. I'd love to get some Technics and/or Marantz stuff though.

I've also been looking for a Laserdisc player for at least two years, to no avail...

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
Laserdiscs would be hard to find outside of thrifts or ebay and you have to flip them. I went from VHS to DVD in my movie watching and never bothered to collect movies outside of a few classics (I have the 3 original stars wars boxed set on VHS) and a small stack of DVDs.

 

EvieSigma

Young ThinkPad Apprentice
That's the great thing about the later players (early to late 90s), no need to pull the disks out to flip them. And I want one mostly because I find the technology fascinating, since the movies are only in composite quality anyway.

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
If I remember correctly they are without compression so action looks crystal clear without artifacts (sure at a lower resolution but I grew up watching VHS sooo...).

 

TheWhiteFalcon

Well-known member
Eh, that depends greatly on the TV, the player, and the LaserDisc. A TV with a good comb filter, a good player, and later quality releases (the DTS LaserDiscs in particular) look great.

 

EvieSigma

Young ThinkPad Apprentice
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olePigeon

Well-known member
I have a few LaserDiscs and player.  They look fine on my crappy old 720p TV.  It's basically my dedicated Star Wars player, but I also have a few movies that I like to play on it including TRON and Hackers.  Hackers is a joke, but it's especially funny watching it on a Laserdisc.  It seems so appropriate. :lol:

I'm on the lookout for an affordable Nightmare on Elm Street collector's edition.  It has a some really cool cut scenes that weren't even included on the Blu-Ray release.

Also, the limited edition Hellraiser Collector's Edition is off-the-walls awesome.  The box art is unbelievable.  It's the centerpiece of my collection. :cool:

 

EvieSigma

Young ThinkPad Apprentice
I'd love to watch Star Wars on laserdisc but I imagine those disks have gotten quite pricey! At least if I want to watch something like RoboCop or Jurassic Park I won't be paying TOO much.

 

CC_333

Well-known member
If anybody is is a Star Trek fan, Laseerdiscs of all six original cast movies, plus most of the TNG movies up to I think Insurrection are relatively plentiful and inexpensive.

The entirety of TNG and much of DS9 (depending on where you look) were available on the format. I wonder how they look compared to the DVD versions, which are quite good....

c

 

CC_333

Well-known member
If you're willing to do some work, okay players that need minor repairs can be had for around $100 on eBay?

c

 

CC_333

Well-known member
Yeah, I can relate to that :)

I payed *way* too much for my players.

And one of them got a shattered laser assembly, so I had to pay another $60 to get a replacement (it's worked perfectly since, though, so that was money well spent).

c

 

EvieSigma

Young ThinkPad Apprentice
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What a bummer! This is what I get for not knowing GPUs well. My free HD 4890 turned out to be a free HD 2900XT instead, a vastly inferior card with half the VRAM. :(  

 
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