Vietnam era stereo reference


I was reading Halliday’s autobiographical Flying Through Midnight about his experience as a pilot over Laos during the Vietnam War. Early on he describes in surprise detail his buddy’s stereo system on that clandestine base.

To wit: "The room was stuffed floor to ceiling with every imaginable piece of state-of-the-art 1970 stereo equipment. It looked more like a sound studio than a place someone lived. Wiley had the newest equipment: a sansui 5000 amplifier, an AKAI crossfield head wheel to real tape deck, the top of the line Garrard English turntable, and four Pioneer CS99 speakers with 15 inch woofers. There was enough power to throb brooms marching out of the closet."

This is way way before my time so I have no idea if this is pretty good or not, but I was intrigued by how he remembered the brands when most people won’t even care about it. Will this constitute a good system back then? Especially on a secret and not supposed to be there air base somewhere in laos?

simao

Showing 1 response by ghdprentice

I just finished reading: The Vietnam War: An Intimate History by Ward and Burns. 

I was in college when the draft ended. What a cluster f*. Respect to the 58,000 that died, the over half million Americans that served and the million Vietnamese that died and many more that participated. What a cluster. 

While I lived through the time... I never really understood what was going on. With all the memoirs and declassified documents now available... this book lays it out starting at the beginning, one hundred years ago, and the war at all levels. 

I highly recommend the book.