Museum of the History of Household Appliances (57 photos)
This museum opened in a famous electronics and household appliances store. Here are dozens of old televisions, receivers, tape recorders and everything else that was once considered a truly technological breakthrough. Some signatures are missing; apparently the creators of the museum themselves do not know the name of this type of equipment. Let's help them and leave the correct option in the comments.
TV KVN-49-4, serial production since 1953:
Radio "Ural-112", 1974:
Radio "Minsk-61":
And these, apparently, are “presets” of the “equalizer”:
Receivers "Speedola" (1975) and "Sirius" (1993):
Overhead projector "Kodak":
Stereo cassette recorder "IZH-303". Six batteries ran out in a matter of hours:
Magnetoelectrophone "VEGA-119-STEREO":
By the way, the inventor and industrialist Singer did not invent the sewing machine and never claimed to have done so. In 1850, when his first machine appeared, a number of models already existed. He simply improved their design flaws, spending 10 days on it, which later made him a rich man:
It is claimed that Singer was the first company in business history to spend more than a million dollars a year on advertising:
Soviet vacuum cleaners give off some kind of cosmic shape:
The Whirlwind vacuum cleaner resembles an astronaut’s helmet:
Soviet film photographic equipment is still popular in certain circles of connoisseurs:
Author: In the center is my first ever camera, Lomo-compact. Then there was Smena 8M and Zenit-E:
Stereo tape recorder "COMETA-225S-3", 1987:
Radio receiver "URAL-AUTO-2":
Nowadays there is a voice recorder in almost every phone:
Remember the first Polaroid?
Cases and cases for cameras are also a different story:
The first mobile phones:
Overhead projector "Kyiv-66". This is what I used to watch filmstrips on as a child:
There are also painted refrigerators and TVs at the exhibition:
Laptop:
My first TV:
Source: sergeydolya