RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: Nostalgia is a hell of a drug, best avoided

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in General Discussion edited July 31

RadioShack's Vintage Turntable looks great, and I really want to like it, but is a practical demonstration that nostalgia is a trap, and design isn't everything.

Wooden vintage-style radio with mesh speaker covers, gold-tone control panel, dials, and RadioShack logo on top, placed on a light wood shelf.
RadioShack Vintage Turntable review



RadioShack has lurched back to life. Sort of. When we heard about the Vintage Turntable from the company, we had to give it a spin. Pun intended.

I'm old enough to remember antiques that looked like this. Wood frames, raised and colored metal for control settings, and so forth.

So, spinning into nostalgia for my Father's record collection, we asked for a sample for review. It took about a week to arrive, and I was daydreaming about it a bit.

I wish I hadn't. The RadioShack Vintage Turntable has some nice features, but too many compromises make it hard to recommend.

When requesting, I had forgotten that this isn't a path that generally ends well for companies purposefully trying to mix new tech with an old aesthetic. Especially if it's being done to meet a price point.

RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: Design



As the name strongly suggests, the RadioShack Vintage Turntable is a record player that tries to play up to being from an older period of time. It's a small chest-style record player, with a lift-up lid that holds the player itself.

The cabinetry is okay, and it certainly has elements that scream old-world appeal. The wood with a metal-styled faceplate, the analog radio dial, the knobs, and the speaker fabric certainly lean in that direction.

Vinyl record with a yellow center label on a wooden turntable, partially open lid, in a sunlit room.
RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: It plays records, but please use external speakers.



At 18 inches wide by 13.4 inches and 9.5 inches tall, it's something that can easily find a location on a side table or in a cabinet.

From afar, it looks nice! It's when you start to look closer that things become an issue. That wood isn't proper wood, it's MDF wrapped with a PVC veneer, which doesn't hold up to a close inspection.

The inclusion of the manufacturer's logo is -- the modern RadioShack textmark -- is oddly appropriate.

Then there's the front panel. It's a colored plastic piece instead of metal, held in with screws.

Vintage-style radio with wood casing, gold panel, tuning knobs, frequency dial, USB port, and speaker grills.
RadioShack Vintage Turntable review:The front interface looks cheap



As part of those newer enhancements, you wouldn't expect a record player from the era this player heralds back to -- the '50s or '60s -- to have a slide-out CD tray, or an LCD screen, or a bank of push buttons and a power LED.

And then there's the SD card slot and USB-A port.

While trying to appear metal-like and old, it unfortunately screams cheap and flimsy. The plastic buttons and knobs don't help either.

While the bulk of the connectivity is at the front, there are also some connectors around the back, which can be used as a line out to other hardware or speakers.

I did this with the (old) receiver next to the speaker as shown in the first image in this review. More on this in a bit.

Black panel on a device with DC IN 9V power socket and red and white RCA line-out connectors labeled R and L.
RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: Rear ports and power



To the side is a cassette player, rounding out its physical media playback features.

Opening it up, you get more of the PVC covering for the wood, as well as a modern, if basic, record deck and arm.

Overall, it has a confused appearance, hampered by modernity. It's trying for "Mad Men" appeal, but really it's giving 90's retro "try hard" vibes instead.

RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: Features



The key selling point of this turntable is its ability to play records. The good news is that it does just that.

The turntable works at three speeds, including 33-1/3 RPM, 45 RPM, and 78 RPM. There's also an auto-return feature, so you know the tonearm will head back to its resting place once the record's finished.

Wooden record player with open lid, black turntable, and tonearm. Yellow caution sticker inside. Visible speed settings: 33, 45, 78 RPM.
RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: Opening the lid reveals the record player



I would be happy with just that, if the 5W internal speakers were decent -- and they're not. They sound tinny and cheap.

As the '80s and '90s commercials often said, there's more. Connecting to the receiver with good speakers, and then to a HDMI wireless transmitter didn't make things any better.

There's also an AM-FM radio built in, controllable with the central dial. This, again, is adequate, but let down by the speakers.

If you have tapes or CDs, you can also insert them for audio playback, again either through its included speakers or to an external pair.

The CD player is serviced from the front with a slide-out tray, along with a row of control buttons just above. You could use CDs, but it also supports MP3s burned to CD-Rs or CD-RW discs.

The tapes are slid in to a slot on the side, which feels a little unusual and more like a very old car stereo in functionality. You also only have a single button to control the cassette's playback, which has fast forward and rewind but it's a fussy half-press for those features.

Close-up of a wooden device with a black switch labeled 'AUTO STOP' in gold, set in a rectangular frame with four screws.
RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: This is where tapes fit in



If you want to digitize your physical music media, there is an opportunity to do that here, and that works the best out of everything on this device. Plugging a drive into the USB-A port or adding an SD card lets you record from your vinyl, CD, cassette, or an AUX audio source to an MP3 file.

This is somewhat handy if you want to own your media, especially if you have limited-availability recordings. It's perfect for those '80s bootlegs.

Obviously, if your music collection already exists on a music streaming service, there's little reason to make these copies at all.

Vintage-style radio with a gold panel, knobs, buttons, USB port, and a speaker grille on wooden casing. AM/FM frequencies displayed on a circular dial.
RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: It's quite hard to read the labels on the front.



The biggest deal-breaker may be the raised labels on the control front. You just can't read them, even in bright light.

Pairing barely passable speakers, with a barely readable control panel is a bad combination.

RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: Old, in the wrong way



It is obvious that the RadioShack Vintage Turntable is attempting to appeal to those who yearn for the "good ol' days" with the aesthetic.

That's fine. We just can't recommend it.

Vintage-style wooden tabletop radio with a central control panel featuring knobs and dials, flanked by speaker grills on either side.
RadioShack Vintage Turntable review: From the top



Aside from the aesthetic, the big pain points here are unreadable controls, the cassette player's limited controls, and the speakers. The latter can be solved, sort of, by hooking up some external speakers and using this as an audio source.

As a record player, it works well enough for old records. If you're a vinyl fan, get something else.

RadioShack Vintage Turntable Pros

  • Plays records and lots of older media

  • MP3 production from old media

RadioShack Vintage Turntable Cons

  • Looks cheap

  • Bad speakers

  • Illegible controls

Rating: 2 out of 5

Where to buy the RadioShack Vintage Turntable



The RadioShack Vintage Turntable is available from Radioshack, priced at $139.99. It's also available on Amazon, also for $139.99.

We've seen it for sale during this review for as low as $80. You probably still want to skip it, though.



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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 15
    Outside looks a bit like 1930s-1940s design (from a distance).  Record player looks more like 1970s-1990s.  
    I still have a Radio Shack by Miracord record changer, but haven't used it in 20 years or so.  
    Some Radio Shack stuff around the home is 25-55 years old.  
    This "vintage turntable"  doesn't look that great.  
    Wondering if this was a one-off design using the Radio Shack name under license.  
    Maybe someone in China, India or Viet Nam is branding items as Radio Shack?  
    Years ago, Radio Shack had AV components from "thrifty" to fairly premium.  
    Unfortunately, they had multiple reorganizations and bankruptcies.  
    Probably not in the market for any electronics in the next 2-4 years (I hope).  
    edited July 30
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  • Reply 2 of 15
    It is probably by another company that just licenses the name.
    jeffharrisquakerotisVictorMortimer
     2Likes 0Dislikes 1Informative
  • Reply 3 of 15
    Fondly remember the Realistic receiver, turntable and MachOne speakers I had back in the day.;  This, unfortunately, is not even close to those.
    VictorMortimer
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 4 of 15
    It's from RadioShack, actually a holding company using the name.

    always made the worst stuff. No reason to stop now.

    in the old days, they badgered you when you went into their retail stores, trying to get you on their mailing list even if you just bought a battery.
    AppleZulu
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  • Reply 5 of 15
    Boys and girls, can we say "enshittification"?

    Radio Shack was really great to have around because when you needed a d-sub connector or a resistor, you could just go grab it right then, no need to order and wait for it to show up.  Their audio gear was always hit and miss, there was an occasional really good bit of gear, but most of it wasn't great.  Realistic was of course almost always rebadged stuff, sometimes it just happened to be really good rebadged stuff.

    But this is just sad.
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 6 of 15
    AppleZuluapplezulu Posts: 2,552member
    Cheap, off-brand audio gear is true vintage Radio Shack. They’re back, baby!

    Their primary utility really was for when you needed some electronic component. They were never the go-to place for audio gear or other consumer electronics if you cared about quality. 

    Most notably, Radio Shack was one of the first to aggressively collect customer data, long before the internet was a thing. Buying a pair of AAA batteries with cash? They wanted your name, address and phone number, and would get downright huffy about it if you refused to give it up. 
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  • Reply 7 of 15
    I volunteer at a thrift store. We get SO MANY of this same item, badged under different brand names for years — Brookstone, Sharper Image, I’ll watch for RadioShack now — always broken some way or other (e.g. eats tapes, or record player not working). “RadioShack” isn’t real and doesn’t make anything, it’s just a name they slap on ever-more-disposable merchandise.
    rjharlan
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 8 of 15
    mknelsonmknelson Posts: 1,179member
    I thought you meant vintage as in an older piece, but I see it's actually Vintage as part of the product name.

    That's sad when they could have done something cool!
    rjharlan
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 9 of 15
    dewmedewme Posts: 6,106member
    It's from RadioShack, actually a holding company using the name.

    always made the worst stuff. No reason to stop now.

    in the old days, they badgered you when you went into their retail stores, trying to get you on their mailing list even if you just bought a battery.
    Sounds like I’m not the only one who found their badgering to be extremely off putting. This type of thing still exists at some retail stores like Harbor Freight Tools. One of my favorite geekware stores, Micro Center, was quite aggressive about this for several years. I can’t count the number of times I had to tell them that I wasn’t going to give them any of the information they wanted. They’d look at me as if I told them I wasn’t going to kill their new puppy. Finally, after more than 20 years of feeding them my money, they quit asking. But I still get a twinge of anxiety whenever I’m lined up in the checkout queue waiting to checkout. 

    My earliest memories of Radio Shack involved going into their stores to test vacuum tubes on their free tube tester. 
    muthuk_vanalingam
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 10 of 15
    Mike Wuerthelemike wuerthele Posts: 7,225administrator
    dewme said:
    It's from RadioShack, actually a holding company using the name.

    always made the worst stuff. No reason to stop now.

    in the old days, they badgered you when you went into their retail stores, trying to get you on their mailing list even if you just bought a battery.
    Sounds like I’m not the only one who found their badgering to be extremely off putting. This type of thing still exists at some retail stores like Harbor Freight Tools. One of my favorite geekware stores, Micro Center, was quite aggressive about this for several years. I can’t count the number of times I had to tell them that I wasn’t going to give them any of the information they wanted. They’d look at me as if I told them I wasn’t going to kill their new puppy. Finally, after more than 20 years of feeding them my money, they quit asking. But I still get a twinge of anxiety whenever I’m lined up in the checkout queue waiting to checkout. 

    My earliest memories of Radio Shack involved going into their stores to test vacuum tubes on their free tube tester. 
    Battery of the month club in the '70s for me.
    rjharlan
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 11 of 15
    If it really were Radio Shack it would be carrying the Realistic brand.
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 12 of 15
    Remembered the lifetime warranty on most electron tubes sold at Radio Shack.  Built and owned a Heathkit color tv with a high voltage rectifier that went out every 2-3 years.  The HV rectifier tube was replaced about six times free before deciding to go to a full solid state tv (except the CRT) around 1992.  


    edited July 31
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  • Reply 13 of 15
    Remembered the lifetime warranty on most electron tubes sold at Radio Shack.  Built and owned a Heathkit color tv with a high voltage rectifier that went out every 2-3 years.  The HV rectifier tube was replaced about six times free before deciding to go to a full solid state tv (except the CRT) around 1992.  


    My dad was a television repair technician and was always working on electronics. Once a week my family would go out shopping and my dad and I would go into Radio Shack. Sometimes he would use a tube checker there or at the Eckard drug store.
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  • Reply 14 of 15
    It is funny how the makerspace has boomed in the last couple of decades with makers having access to tools you could only dream about in the past and yet Radio Shack failed. I guess they shifted to mainly selling cellphones?
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  • Reply 15 of 15
    Mike Wuerthelemike wuerthele Posts: 7,225administrator
    It is funny how the makerspace has boomed in the last couple of decades with makers having access to tools you could only dream about in the past and yet Radio Shack failed. I guess they shifted to mainly selling cellphones?
    That, compounded with the fact that they were bought by venture capitalists that shifted debt to the corporate entity, and made it impossible to pay it off.

    Just like Toys R Us.
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
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