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Contributions to Soundesign 5171 (current version)

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Version Date User
2021-03-15 21:34 Reli
2021-03-15 22:14 Reli
2021-03-15 22:12 Reli
2021-03-15 22:11 Reli
2021-03-15 21:56 Reli
2021-03-15 21:34 Reli

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Author Words Whitespaces Characters Printable characters
Used Deleted Used Deleted Used Deleted Used Deleted
Reli 245 (100.0%) 0 (0.0%) 201 (100.0%) 0 (0.0%) 1242 (100.0%) 0 (0.0%) 971 (100.0%) 0 (0.0%)
Total 245 (100.0%) 0 (100.0%) 201 (100.0%) 0 (100.0%) 1242 (100.0%) 0 (100.0%) 971 (100.0%) 0 (100 %)

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Soundeisgn was one of the pioneers of the "rack system", a concept where you could get a receiver, tape deck, speakers, and rack for one low price. These systems succeeded because it was easy to fool people with flashy styling while hiding the inferior components inside. Take this model 5171CS9 rack system for example. The receiver (model TX05171) looks "legit" with its metal face, big knobs, and both analog and LED meters. The tuner has both traditional flywheel action as well as a florescent display that can indicate tuner frequency or current time. For sound tailoring you have bass, treble, loudness, and high and low filters. But if you were to open it up and look inside, you'd find a lot of empty space. It's rated at only 12 watts per channel (from 40 to 20,000 Hz into 8 ohms at no more than 1% total harmonic distortion). So you're not going to be waking the neighbors with it. And get this, it was the strongest system offered by Soundesign in 1982. The others only had 8-10 watts per channel. The model 0487 tape deck has some kind of generic unbranded noise reduction system instead of Dolby. The model 0666K speakers are styled to look like 3-ways, but they're really only 2-ways with 8" woofers and 3" tweeters.

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