45 Record Adapter T-Shirts
Description: If you remember these, you are cool. If you still have some, you are beyond cool. A 45 rpm adapter (also known as a 45 rpm record insert, 45 rpm spindle adapter, spider, or 7-inch adapter in reference the usual size of a 45 rpm record) is a small plastic or metal insert that goes in the middle of a 45-rpm record so it can be played on the standard size spindle of a turntable. The adapter may be a small solid circle that fits onto the spindle (meaning only one 45 could be played at a time) or a larger adapter that fits over the entire spindle of a record changer, permitting a stack of 45s to be played.
Description: A 45 rpm adapter (also 45 rpm record insert, 45 rpm spindle adapter) is a small plastic or metal insert that goes in the middle of a 45-rpm record so it can be played on the standard size spindle of a turntable. A necessity if you had single records.
Description: A 45 rpm adapter (also 45 rpm record insert, 45 rpm spindle adapter) is a small plastic or metal insert that goes in the middle of a 45-rpm record so it can be played on the standard size spindle of a turntable. A necessity if you had single records. The yellow adapter was the color I always had.
Description: If you remember these, you are cool. If you still have some, you are beyond cool. A 45 rpm adapter (also known as a 45 rpm record insert, 45 rpm spindle adapter, spider, or 7-inch adapter in reference the usual size of a 45 rpm record) is a small plastic or metal insert that goes in the middle of a 45-rpm record so it can be played on the standard size spindle of a turntable. The adapter may be a small solid circle that fits onto the spindle (meaning only one 45 could be played at a time) or a larger adapter that fits over the entire spindle of a record changer, permitting a stack of 45s to be played. These larger adapters allowing multiple records to be played are often referred to as 45 spindles.
Description: A burst of color in the pattern of the old school vinyl 45 adapters that were ubiquitous in every teenager's bedroom from the 1960s to the 1980s and are now all but forgotten. A symetrical triskelion design snapped into the larger hole of the 45 singles that made them usable on the 33.3 rpm turntables.