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EMERSON A51 four-speed record player with BSR auto-changer, circa 1959

As far as I can make out, this is an American design, as Emerson appears to be a well-known name in the USA. It may have been imported as a finished product or may, because of import duties, etc. been assembled in the UK. It is a two-valve (two-tube) design with a large elliptical speaker.

The Emerson is fitted with a BSR UA8 autochanger, and I believe this to be the case for all markets. These turntables, which could play a stack of records of different sizes but not different speeds in one stack, automatically compensated for the size of the record and always put the stylus down in the appropriate place. Of course, this being the cusp of the 78rpm/vinyl changeover, a flip-over stylus was provided. The BSR autochangers were bullet-proof and could work for decades with minimal trouble. Just be sure to change the stylus at reasonable intervals...Here goes the 'Warsaw Concerto' !

The Emerson performs creditably well, although the inscription 'Hi Fidelity' in rather nice Fifties-style cursive script, is something of a misnomer.
ninalanyon · 61-69, T
BSR was British. It stands for Birmingham Sound Reproducers. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birmingham_Sound_Reproducers

Interestingly Emerson Electric acquired what remained of BSR, Astec (BSR) in 1998.
uncalled4 · 56-60, M
@supersnipe Very cool! I used to have a Garrard back in the 70s. Ceramic cartridge, I think.
supersnipe · 61-69, M
@uncalled4 They (ceramic cartridges) were quite common - the name that came up over and over again was Sonotone. Of course you could fit different cartridges. This one has a Shure magnetic cartridge and of course the 78rpm stylus.
uncalled4 · 56-60, M
@supersnipe As soon as I learned the difference between magnetic and ceramic I switched and never looked back.
RedBaron · M
Why? Toss all the paraphernalia and hardware and tell Alexa or Siri to play it. More convenient and much higher quality sound. In other news, cellphones have made landlines virtually obsolete.
uncalled4 · 56-60, M
BSR was a huge OEM for a lot of turntables sold under other names. At one point, it was BSR/ADC/DBX and very cool in an analog world.

It's sad how today, people are buying the rights to once great brand names and issuing absolute shit. You'd think people would have caught on by now.
supersnipe · 61-69, M
@uncalled4 Bush?

 
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