A distant relative of the expandable WM-10 family, now with recording and radio but without the sliding mechanism and 2xAA batteries in the Walkman.
In the WM-10 family of super small Walkmans, now with the controls on the front (instead of top), and auto-reverse.
The final model in the WM-10 series of stretchable Walkmans is both the heaviest and thickest, but it uniquely features auto-reverse. Identical to the WM-40.
WM-K1 in Canada and rest of world, also known as the WM-F32 in the US market. The mechanism of the US and Canada model is the same as WM-F41, for rest of world as WM-F31.
One of the My First Sony range, aimed at kids. Front and rear window, the latter showing the mechanism. Object in the rear view window are closer than they appear? ≡
Last DD unit to be released, closing the cost-reduced DD1-DD10-DD11 line.
FM Stereo/AM, Auto reverse in a compact, Casual package. It has a built-in speaker on the front of the machine. The pocket-size is like a portable speaker. You can enjoy your favorite music anywhere.
Commemorating the 10th Anniversary of the Walkman, with 5-band graphic equalizer.
The famous "Solar Walkman" was indeed a technological marvel. ≡
This milestone walkman was the second walkman after the legendary TPS-L2 and set the form factor for the DD line. ≡
The last Sony portable with 2 headphone jacks, almost completely a WM-DD30 wearing a modern jacket. ≡
Added a quartz-locked action to the DD motor, giving absolute speed stability. ≡
DD2 had the addition of Dolby B noise reduction, and many minor improvements. ≡
First DD unit with MegaBass, derived from DD-100 DOL. Feature/functionality a mix of DD3 & DD-100: quartz driven and bass expansion.
The first model of the 'disc drive' series, the WM-DD, was introduced in 1982, and had a solid reputation for performance.