The Most Unusual Walkman Design: The Toshiba Walky

In the mid-1980s, Toshiba’s industrial designers were apparently tasked with designing a Walkman that would be smaller than everyone else’s—in just one dimension, that is. They then came up with the KT-AS10, a/k/a the Walky:

Image: Cassette Players Walkman Blog

The unusual design called for a removable radio tuner unit shaped like the bottom two-thirds of a cassette.

Image: Cassette Players Walkman Blog

With the tuner pulled out, you could then insert a cassette, which protruded out of the top of the unit.

Image: Cassette Players Walkman Blog

Image: Cassette Players Walkman Blog

Image: Cassette Players Walkman Blog

Image: Cassette Players Walkman Blog

So yes, the Walky was technically smaller (shorter) than any of its competitors.

So where do you put the tuner when you’re listening to a cassette? Hey man, that’s your problem.

Image: Cassette Players Walkman Blog

It’s such a weird trade-off, but it’s kind of fun to see Japanese designers experimenting like this. It’s literally outside-of-the-box thinking.

Image: Cassette Players Walkman Blog

That said, the unit doesn’t look fun to use. Here’s a demo video shot by someone selling one on eBay, to prove it works:

Funny thing: This video is at least partially faked. Watch closely around 1:19, and you’ll spot a jump in the video—look at the top of the cassette—yet the music continues uninterrupted. I hope whomever bought it on eBay didn’t get screwed.

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