Fu10 The Galician | Gotta 45 Portable

Produced by a short-lived startup called , the Fu10 was intended to revive the 7-inch single culture in rural Spain. It failed commercially but succeeded aesthetically, becoming a design icon for those lucky enough to find one. The Design: Industrial Brutalism Meets Atlantic Folk Art Do not confuse the Fu10 with a typical plastic Crosley. The chassis is made from reclaimed chestnut wood sourced from the forests of Lugo, coated with a mineral oil finish that smells faintly of smoke and sea salt. The handle is hand-stitched leather from a family tannery in Pontevedra.

The Galician gotta is not a device for background listening. It is a device for ceremony —for pulling a 7-inch single from a worn sleeve, placing the needle in the drop, and listening alone in a room that smells like wood and salt. fu10 the galician gotta 45 portable

Have you ever seen or heard an Fu10 the Galician Gotta 45 Portable in the wild? Share your story in the comments below. And if you are selling one—contact us immediately. Produced by a short-lived startup called , the

The real magic is the —a tiny, spring-driven unit scavenged from broken 1960s tape recorders. Flip the "Néboa" (Fog) switch, and the sound blooms with artificial cavernous echo. In a damp Galician kitchen, playing an old Los Suaves 45 through that reverb is a transcendent experience. Scarcity and Collector Mania: Where is the Fu10 Now? By 2012, Sonorous Rías Baixas had folded. Most of the 500 units were sold locally in Santiago de Compostela and Vigo. Many were discarded when batteries corroded, or when the chestnut wood warped in the humid Atlantic climate. The chassis is made from reclaimed chestnut wood

Collectors don't chase the Fu10 for its specs. They chase it for its story: a quixotic dream from the rainy edge of Europe to build a portable record player that felt like home.