Mcgraw Hill W9 Portable ⭐ Free Access

While McGraw-Hill is best known today as a massive publishing and educational corporation (textbooks, Business Week , etc.), few people realize that their now-defunct industrial electronics division produced some of the most over-engineered, reliable, and sought-after portable tape recorders ever made.

McGraw Hill’s industrial division pivoted in the late 1950s to serve the "business communications" market. They saw a need: field journalists interviewing subjects in noisy environments, engineers documenting bridge stress tests, and even the military needing a rugged device for "voice and signature" intelligence gathering. mcgraw hill w9 portable

The result was the . The "W" likely stood for "Wireless" or "Workhorse," but by the time the W9 rolled off the production line in the mid-1960s, it had evolved into a three-motor, direct-drive system that rivaled the professional studio decks of the day—only it fit under an airplane seat. While McGraw-Hill is best known today as a

However, the DNA of the W9 lives on. The engineering principles—direct drive, mechanical counter memory, and ruggedized aluminum chassis—eventually trickled down into the (the 221, 430, etc.), which dominated field recording until the digital revolution of the 1990s. The result was the