WM-1

Sony WM-1 feature
WML ID #103
Manufacturer
Sony
Model
WM-1
Year
1981
Made in
Japan
Initial price
260 DM
Technical details, specifications
Battery
4AA
Colors
gray
Dimensions
160*95*37 mm (562 cm³)3D size
Weight
480 gr
Window
yes
Frame
plastic
Case
plastic
Carry
belt
Expandable
no
External compartment
no
Tape selector
Manual switch
Waterproof
no
Speaker
no
FMax output
2x30 mW
Functions
DC in
yes
Record by input
no
Record by int mic
no
Hotline mode
yes
Cue
yes
Phone type
1
AMS no
Blank skip no
Logic control
no
Noise reduction
no
Radio
no
Remote control
no
Wireless headphone
no
Indicator
led
Description

Although the name might be misleading, it is the 3rd personal stereo cassette player to be announced by Sony.

One could easily mistake the WM-1 for the first Walkman model from its numbering. However, this is not the case, and the WM-1 was actually the third personal stereo cassette player to be announced by Sony, following the TPS-L2 and the WM-2 “Walkman II”. The WM-1 followed the same design practice as had resulted in the TPS-L2, taking an existing tape recorder and turning it into a stereo cassette player through simplification and rationalisation. The difference was that the WM-1 was based on a simpler, cheaper and less compact range of models than the TPS-L2 had been, so a simpler, cheaper and larger Walkman resulted. This was a sensible move, as it broadened the Walkman range and in introducing a lower cost model, made it more accessible.

Compared to the TPS-L2 and WM-2, the WM-1 was indeed a substantial machine. Despite this, it was fairly basic, lacking such refinements as the separate left/right volume controls and “hot line” microphone of the former model and the soft-touch tape transport keys and full auto-stop of the latter. Internally, the mechanism was larger and simpler than the other models and used a less elaborate motor with a standard iron rotor and no servo feedback generator. The mechanism betrayed its dictating machine origins by the inclusion of “cue” and “review” modes during playback.

Despite these economies, the WM-1 worked well, and even included two headphone sockets so that two people could listen. A volume control dial similar to that found on the WM-2 was fitted, so as to visually tie the two otherwise quite dissimilar models together.

The WM-1 helped to popularise the Walkman idea by making ownership easier, though surprisingly the smaller, more expensive models proved to be more popular in the end. It was replaced by the WM-4, which was similar but slightly smaller.Via Walkman Central

Documents
sony_wm-1_wm1_smanual.pdf7970 KB
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Created
2021-08-14 13:16:26
Updated
2024-04-15 03:36:44
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