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Stromberg Carlson Mic Microphone W/ Flexible Stand Model HD-56CS (Turner S95D)

$ 35.89

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Compatible Brand: 4 pin
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Condition: Condition is used
  • Brand: Stromberg Carlson
  • Features: Flexible stand
  • Type: Microphone
  • Mount Type: Stand
  • Modified Item: No
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Connectivity: 4 Pin
  • MPN: HD-56CS
  • Custom Bundle: No

    Description

    Very Rare 1950s Stromberg Carlson Mic Microphone W/ Flexible Stand, it is the Model HD-56CS which is the rebranded "Turner S95D"
    Very nice and collectible microphone! Comes with the flexible stand, and comes only as seen in the pictures
    Stromberg-Carlson MD-56CS Specs:
    Transducer Type: Non-metallic diaphragm dynamic
    Polar Pattern: Omnidirectional
    Frequency Response: 100 Hz—10 kHz
    Sensitivity: -58 dB
    Nominal Impedance: Low or high
    Size: 8 in x 1 in
    Net Weight: 18 ounces
    List Price In 1960:
    Nothing Finer
    While not a household name today, S-C has a long history in communications electronics. The company was founded in Chicago by partners Alfred Stromberg and Androv Carlson in 1894, the year Alexander Graham Bell’s patent for the telephone expired and many companies were vying to make their way in that growing market. In fact, S-C eventually grew to become one of the largest suppliers of phone equipment in the U.S.
    The company relocated to Rochester area of New York State in 1902 following a failed takeover attempt by rival Western Electric, and expanded its product line to include a variety of consumer electronic goods, including radios. “There is nothing finer than a Stromberg-Carlson” was the slogan in advertisements.
    During World War II, S-C manufactured electronic parts for the U.S. military and was also one of three companies that produced the ubiquitous BC-348 high-frequency radio communications receiver for the U.S. Army Air Force, the predecessor of the U.S. Air Force. The BC-348 worked so well that the Soviet Union came up with a copy that was in service well into the 1970s.
    After the war, S-C added television sets to its product line, in addition to numerous iterations of home radios, intercom systems, and public address equipment, in addition to owning and operating several commercial broadcast stations in New York. In 1955, the company was purchased by General Dynamics, which sold off the various divisions by 1982. Remnants of the brand survive to this day.
    Offering Options
    The MD-56CS dynamic-type is a re-badged Turner S95D, a public address and general purpose mic that was Turner’s best-selling model in the mid-1950s.
    Designed in the late 1940s, it was included in the catalog until the mid-1960s. Turner offered two models, the 95D and the S95D, with the difference being the “S” version came equipped with an on/off switch built into the stand mount base. (Both versions were also available from S-C.)
    An advertisement of the time stated that the MD-56CS had a wide response range and outstanding sound characteristics that made it well suited for any public address use. The mic was available in a low-impedance 200-ohm version or a high-impedance version like mine.
    It features a die-cast alloy housing and built-in stand mount. Unlike most mics of this style that can swivel up to 90 degrees in relationship to the base, the MD-56CS only swivels about 40 degrees forward and 20 degrees to the rear. The business end is simply an end cap that is punched with holes to allow the sound to reach the cartridge.