CDs are actually too small for the bookshelf. So where to put it?
In plastic stand, in index boxes? Why not something fancy! This jukebox replica fits over 100 CDs.
It's been ninety years, when the first jukebox with record archive was set up. Hand-operated mechanics and a funnel gramophone as a playback device were state of the art. With the introduction of electric amplifiers in 1927 a full-sounding box was able to compete with live orchestras for the first time. The breakthrough came after the Second World War. And such a box from the fifties, 1960s is also the model for our music cabinet. He's not an automatic player, but offers the most modern hi-fi technology. More than 100 CDs fit in the drawers of the drum, that can be played in your system, which you can store in the lower part of the cupboard. The building material for our "classic" is MDF board for the body, Hardboard for all round parts and plywood for construction elements of the
drum. The pillars are simple sewer pipes, the, like some planes, get their glitter effect through self-adhesive foil. A light snake with flashing lights forms the appropriate framework for the look of the early Elvis Presley years.
Show working photos and the drawings on the following pages, how the jukebox is built. If you want to learn more about the build and prefer to work with an accurate bill of materials, we will be happy to send you our construction plan (s. crate).
Of course there are no limits to your ideas and wishes for the appearance of the jukebox. self-adhesive, You can find glittery appliqués in craft stores.