February 15, 2007 11:08 AM PST

Chrysler's in-car phonograph

The Columbia phonograph in a 1956 DeSoto

(Credit: UAW-DaimlerChrysler National Training Center)

Not much surprises us nowadays on the CNET Car Tech channel. In this age of mobile, voice-activated, wireless, digital, high-definition, mesh-networked, in-car infotainment, we hardly bat an eyelid as torrents of new automotive gadgets comes down the pike.

The forerunner to the auxiliary-input jack

(Credit: UAW-DaimlerChrysler National Training Center)

But here's something that made us sit up and take notice: an in-car phonograph. According to an article on the UAW-DaimlerChrysler National Training Center Web site, these record players--made by Columbia and offered as options on 1956 Chrysler, DeSoto, Dodge, and Plymouth models--could handle 45-speed records as well as 7-inch records in the new 16-2/3 format. The players were installed on a slide-out turntable beneath the dash and hidden behind a drop-down door that could be opened at the push of a button. Way before people were banging on about multimedia convergence, drivers could switch between the radio tuner and the phonograph with the flip of a switch and use the same volume and equalizer controls for both sources.

Alas, problems abounded with the system: Records skipped as the car encountered uneven surfaces. And an exclusive content arrangement with Columbia meant that drivers could listen only to artists signed to Columbia Records. According to the UAW Web site, the option initially lasted for only one model year, and despite resurgence a couple of year later, it was finally abandoned.

While we flatter ourselves that we might have been able to anticipate some of these problems (had we been born), we salute the pioneers of Car Tech.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 18 comments (Page 1 of 2)
Have you ever heard of Motorola??
by The Noble Robot February 15, 2007 2:04 PM PST
This isn't news. The company Motorola, now primarily makers of cell phones and denouncers of vowels, was originally a company that made car audio systems, and their very first product was, ta da, a record player for your car. Hence the brand name "Motorola," a blend of "Motor" and "Victrola" (the Kleenex of phonograph brands). Duh... for a gadget blog you sure don't know your gadget history.
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Motorola's first product was a battery eliminator
by kevinmassy February 15, 2007 2:39 PM PST
which it introduced in 1928. According to its Web site, the company did adopted the name Motorola based on its car radio , the name being a link between motor (for motorcar) and "ola", which implied sound.
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The prototype is much older
by Visualdude February 16, 2007 6:39 AM PST
I remember seeing a Laurel and Hardy movie in which they had a victrola mounted under the hood (or it might have been on the outside. Anyway this gag scene is that you think their listeding to a radio when they stop so Laurel can get out and service the victrola. I guess they were pioneers of more than just perspective cinematography.
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I had a Tape Recorder in my car - in those days
by CasualVisitor February 16, 2007 9:21 AM PST
I had an old VM (Voice of Music brand) reel to reel 120V tape recorder positioned on the hump of my 1954 Ford, powered by an inverter. No skiping! I ripped - er recorded - songs off the radio and made several comp (compiled) 7" reel tapes. I had a wolverine (brand) 8" high complience speaker with incorporated whizzer cone (for high frequencies) mounted in the rear deck which used the entire (cube shaped) trunk as a speaker box. GREAT SOUND! I knew exactly what I was doing, because I built the high end speaker wall (for comparing speakers) for the high-fi store I worked for in high school. Wow - - thank you for letting me share - .
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Awesome Install
by delaisaac February 16, 2007 12:09 PM PST
It reminds me of my dad's custom (blow torch) installation of his 8 track into the 69 chevy. Needless to say, he was not wearing a white glove when putting in a tape. John http://www.monomachines.com
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When comedy doesn't work
by marcus132 February 16, 2007 2:15 PM PST
I actually tried to put a record player in my '99 Volkswagen GTI. As you might guess, it ended in tears. http://marcus132.livejournal.com/57441.html
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Columbia only?
by derekbill February 16, 2007 2:58 PM PST
How, pray tell, did they keep you from playing something from, say, RCA Victor or Decca?
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Car Phonographs
by glendalewinnipeg February 16, 2007 6:38 PM PST
Interestingly enough a high flying friend of mine Simpson often speaks of these car phonographs which in the evolution of auto sound systems came long before 8 Tracks. It was a measurement of the poor state of Canadian roads that romantic events would be building up on the way up from the states until the car hit the Canadian border and Canadian roads where the poor quality of the road state would result in the record skipping and the end of any romantic music. www.glendalegolfs.com
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car phonograph
by photobug56 February 18, 2007 12:16 AM PST
My father had a 45 rpm portable car phonograph decades ago. When he stopped using it in the late 60's or so (it wasn't the most practical thing to have in a car) I put together a 12vdc power supply, hooked it up to a WWII era amp of my father's, and we then were able to listen to records in our room down in the basement. We did that until he bought an old Seeburg 100 record jukebox...
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LP players could be bought from
by mustangj36 February 19, 2007 7:20 AM PST
J.C.Whitney back in the '60's. I knew a guy who had one. You fed records into it much like car cd players today. The skipping problem never was solved. The big, soft sprung cars of the era helped, but it didn't take much to make the needle jump.
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