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Luckily, this Seeburg jukebox wall remote repurposing is not one of those projects. [Scott M. Baker] seems to have an appreciation for the finer things, and when he scored this classic piece of ...
In this photo from April of 1948 we see engineer Myron Holbert, who’s showing off the Seeburg Select-O-Matic jukebox. The machine held a relatively enormous library of music — 200 selections!
which is about the same size as a conventional jukebox, includes a three-beam laser pick-up, Sony’s most advanced sound processing circuitry and a newly designed Seeburg 200-watt stereo ...
Back in the 1950s, those teens often listened to their favorite songs on machines with names such as the Seeburg Select-O-Matic, the Rock-Ola, or Wurlitzer. At the height of the jukebox's ...
Collectively, his machines trace the evolution of jukebox design over three decades. "In the 1950s, the big thing was cars," Bennett said of the Seeburg. "And so jukeboxes were made to look like cars.
This box can play records at either 33-1/3 or 45 RPM from a carousel of 100 discs, therefore having a selection of 200 songs ... of a diner table-top Seeburg jukebox back in 2018.
popping out a phonograph arm from a 1951 Seeburg Model B. “It’s a labor of love.” The love began when Coulter was 12. He paid $25 for a busted 1946 Aireon jukebox in a neighbor’s garage.
When she arrived, the sellers, a retired couple in Bristol, took her down to their rec room, where a vintage, 1950s Seeburg Stereophonic Q100 jukebox in mint condition held a place of honor.