Yess! of couse! plus the d jays use them
yeah
There are very few record players still being manufactured that are not for DJ purposes known as turntables. One such model still in production is the Technics SL1200.
You can by vinyl record albums of many current releases. Phonographs (record players) are still made by many manufacturers.
Cheap record players are mostly plastic. High end record players are mostly aluminum and steel.
William Tell Woodcrafter Inc. produced record players for General Electric in the early 1950s. Specifically, the collaboration began around 1952, when GE was expanding its line of consumer electronics, including phonographs and record players.
Boetsch Bros in New York manufactured Birch record players. Boetsch Bros is known to have created Birch record players from at least 1930 to 1960.
Steepletone sells various types of record players. Ones that play 45s and ones that have a CD player compartment attached. Steepletone sells record players on Amazon.
Manufacturers that still make cassette CD players are Sony, Emerson, Naxa Electronics, Supersonic, Teac and Jensen. You can also find products to convert from cassettes to digital formats.
No they didnt
Yes, some Blu-Ray players offer the option to record, and you can record anything you can record with DVD or VHS, only at higher quality.
Mag holds the record of having the 256 players online.
Yes most portable cassette players get radio and also record as well