I think the way around the patents must have to do with the European manufacture and sale of these units. I should have limited my remarks to US production. Thanks for the reminder that there were no Stereo FM broadcasts until 1961, other than the tests performed at KDKA in 1960. I remember that I built a stereo music system in college in 1952, (in fact I still have most of that system, I'm staring at one of the Klipschorn folded horn speakers as I type) but I suppose I didn't have a Stereo tuner for it until after1961 - I thought it was because I was too poor, but you have the right dates, I'm sure Dick Benjamin ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark Brauer" <beeser324@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Saturday, March 08, 2003 2:20 PM Subject: IML: Search tune FM, WAS: '66 headlights and radio > Dick Benjamin wrote: > > SNIP an exellant history on search tune automobile radios, BUT: > > > > > The first search tune with FM was released in GM cars, of course, and only > > let out to the competition after they had made the advertising splash with > > it. > > > I have a 1956 Mercedes-Benz 190SL with a Becker Mexico radio. I don't know > how they got around Delco's search tune radio patents (maybe they just paid > them royalties?), but, it's got AM/FM AND search tune! And, I'm quite > certain this was not the first year for the Becker Mexico. > > (Their website: http://www.becker.de/html/de/produkt_promd4937.html : > claims "1953 - The classic Becker Mexico is launched. The first car {SIC} > with automatic channel search.") > > > The first FM Stereo was similarly tied up in patents, although I'm not as > > conversant with the facts in that matter. I am aware of Stereo in Cadillac > > and probably other GM cars in the early 60's - I think 64 for Cadillac (It > > worked, but barely, with the damn relay clicking all the time!). The delay > > for other luxury brands was the same deal - GM gets first crack at it > > because they put up the money to develop it. That's the American way, > > folks! > > Just to add that there were no multiplex stereo radios, anywhere, before > 1961, as the FCC didn't OK multiplex broadcasts till then. That didn't mean > you couldn't listen to non-multiplex stereo broadcasts in your home before > 1961, however; you just needed two radios, one set to an AM station for one > channel, another set to the corresponding FM station for the other channel. > Or, you could use one of the Hi-Fi tuners that allowed you to listen to both > AM and FM at the same time with seperate outputs (like the Heathkit PT-1), > but I'm getting severly tangental and off-topic now.... > > Mark in Westminster, CO > 1952 Chrysler Imperial 2-Door Hardtop (Philco AM radio with tune-able > pre-sets) > > >