I have several fond memories of Pacific Stereo. I was involved with PS initially at its humble beginnings, but mostly between 1970-1976, when I was a salesman at the Walnut Creek, Pleasant Hill, and San Francisco stores.
My fondest memory: In 1962, when I was 14 years young and living in Berkeley, CA, I lived next door to one of the founders of Pacific Stereo, Ted Bennett. He hired me to make bookshelf stereo speakers in his basement workshop. 8" 2-way Electro-Voice speaker in a Walnut Veneer cabinet. Ted ripped the veneer, and I assembled the speaker box and the speakers and cross-over. It was fun and I certainly enjoyed it.
Mr. Bennett was planning to introduce stereo component systems to the initial Pacific Electronic store in Berkeley, which later, because of the success of these speaker cabinets and other electronics, and his genius marketing skills, became the first Pacific Stereo, followed by the San Francisco and Walnut Creek Stores.
With in a year or so, speaker cabinet demand was so incredible, I could not meet supply, so the speaker-making operation was relocated, moved around, and ultimately moved to PS's Emeryville plant to become Quadraflex Industries.
I didn't stay in Berkeley for long and went off to college in 1966, only to return after graduating in 1970 to be a salesman in the Walnut Creek store.
One might be curious to know what type of stereo system I might have acquired while working at PS. Though salesman promotions, sales contests, purchasing directly customer trade-ins, and buying from other salesmen, I managed to assemble a nice stereo system: two pairs of Infinity Servo-static 1A speakers, a Harman Kardon Citation 15 tuner, a Harman Kardon Citation A pre-amp, Harman Kardon Citation 12 power amps, and a Panasonic Techniques Direct-drive turntable with Rabco arm. This vintage stereo component system is still mostly operating to this day, I only replaced the Citation 12's with Carver amps.
Thanks for all those fond memories!
Greg