Sony | F99t

If you see one at a flea market or an estate sale—buy it. Even broken. Then call me. The Sony F99T is a reminder that innovation doesn’t always win. Sometimes, the best products are the ones that arrive too early, cost too much, or ask too many questions about what a portable device should be.

Probably not. And that is exactly what makes it so fascinating.

But have you ever heard of the ?

If you consider yourself a Sony collector, a vintage audio enthusiast, or just someone who falls down deep Wikipedia rabbit holes at 2 AM, you’ve probably heard of the legendary Sony TPS-L2 (the original Walkman), the iconic WM-10, or the quirky DD series.

The F99T appears to be a —a marriage between a portable stereo cassette recorder and a digital synthesized tuner—built around 1987. The Design That Time Forgot Based on the few surviving grainy photos from Japanese electronics trade shows (and one very lucky Reddit user who found a non-working unit in an Osaka scrap shop), the F99T is stunning. sony f99t

Long answer: In the last decade, exactly Sony F99T units have appeared publicly. One sold on Yahoo Japan Auctions for ¥480,000 (roughly $3,200 USD). Another sits in the private collection of a former Sony engineer in Tokyo. The third? Its whereabouts are unknown.

After weeks of digging through obscure Japanese audio forums, auction archives, and scanned service manuals, I’ve pieced together the story of what might be Sony’s most elusive "almost" product. First, a reality check: The Sony F99T was never a mass-produced retail unit. In fact, most official Sony timelines don’t even mention it. If you see one at a flea market or an estate sale—buy it

It was a cassette player. It was a radio. It was a field recorder. It was a fever dream from Sony’s most experimental era.