
Feast your eyes on the result of weeks of work using the various remains of over a dozen cars — from 80's BMW's to a 1990 Toyota Tercel — it's the glorious Turbo II Junkyard Boogaloo boombox. For those of you who want the gearhead nitty-gritty, the full "How To" is here. For those who just want to see this baby in all of its radical goodness, below you'll find some documentation of what the Turbo II is and does ...
Ninety-two pounds of plywood and car parts joined together as an homage to the homemade car-battery boomboxes used by first-generation break dancers; if you've watched the video above you've already got the general idea of the Turbo II Junkyard Boogaloo's features. Read on and we'll fill you in on the details:

The right-hand area of the top panel contains all the switches used to control the Turbo II, plus a couple of lights. We'll run them down one by one, detouring occasionally to check out some of the features they control...

First, we have the Memory Button. This thing started life as a Fuel switch for a '77 Jaguar (can anyone explain what happened to a Jaguar when you hit this button?) and required rebuilding in order to function properly (the Curse of Joe Lucas), but now it provides power to the Turbo II's memory circuit (i.e., the clocks and memory circuit on the cassette deck). Normally this button is kept in the "On" position at all times.

To the right of the Memory Button lies the Inverter Power Switch. Originally a rear window defroster switch from a Peugeot 505, today this switch activates the power inverter that powers the 120VAC outlet on the right side panel of the Turbo II.

It's important for any boombox worth its salt to be capable of powering small household appliances; this inverter is rated for 150 watts output. That air vent came from a 1979 Volvo 245 and prevents hydrogen from the car battery inside from building up.

It will even power an official NASCAR Jeff Gordon blender!

Next to the Inverter Power Switch is the Flasher Activation Switch. A '75 Volvo 244 gave up its Rear Demist switch for this purpose; there are four separate flasher circuits, each with its own turn-signal flasher operating on its own unique beat, to operate the Turbo II's groove-inducing flashing lights. Let's take a look at those lights:

Right in the middle of all the switches on the top, there's a single '81 Datsun 280ZX front marker light, with a little Wipe light (from a long-forgotten junkyard source) next to it.

Even with its origins shrouded in mystery, the Wipe light adds a special something to the Turbo II's light show.

On the front panel, there are two pairs of 70s Datsun marker lights; here are the left-side ones.

On top, five warning lights from 70s Italian cars (if I recall correctly, Fiats and Alfas) flash in unison.

These Italian indicator lights are very nice; real metal, glass, and chrome. Say what you will about Italian cars' build quality, but their components have style.

From the same '77 Jag that donated the ashtrays and Fuel button comes a pair of snazzy-looking rear side marker lights. Sure, neither of them worked at first, but it only took most of a day to fix them up enough to work properly. Here's the left-side one- doesn't it look nice?

Snuggled between the analog clock and voltmeter, this marker light from a '69 Toyota Corona now makes its home on the Turbo II.

This little green indicator light comes from an unknown source, but its air of mystery only adds to the Turbo II mystique.

Peugeots of the early 70s came with these low-fuel warning lights; six of them perform flashing duty on the front of the Turbo II. They are wired in pairs to three separate flasher circuits.

I can't recall what kind of car this Oil Reset button came from, but I'm guessing BMW. In any case, it now activates a howling early-80s-vintage Piranha car-alarm siren.

This three-option switch once controlled the shift points of the automatic transmission in an '85 Toyota Cressida. Nowadays it serves a far more illustrious purpose: controlling the power antennas and wired FM modulator (which enables an MP3 player or other external audio source to play through the cassette deck) on the mighty Turbo II Junkyard Boogaloo! This switch has power only when the Ignition Button is on. The options are:
ECON: Antennas down, FM modulator on.
NORM: Antennas down, FM modulator off.
PWR: Antennas up.

Here are the RCA jacks that provide the input for the modulator. The epoxy holding them in place looks crude, but... well, it is crude!

Since it enables power to the cassette and 8-track players, voltmeter, and antenna/modulator switch, this is the Turbo II's "Ignition Switch." It started life as the air-conditioning button for a '79 Toyota Corona, but look at it now!

Mercedes-Benz, back when their cars were reliable, used to install electrical hardware good for a hundred years of hard use, so I grabbed this Hazard button from a junked 280SE and set it up as the power switch for Turbo II's three lighters (it's not a good idea to leave the lighter sockets active at all times, hence the switch).

To the front of the pair of Jaguar ashtrays on the top panel, the three lighters (one Volvo, two Nissan) may be used for their original incendiary purpose, to provide accessory power, or to charge the battery using a special charger adapter.

The charger adapter is made from PVC plumbing components; just plug it into a lighter socket, attach the clamps from a battery charger onto its contacts, and wait a few hours for a full battery-o-juice.

The Jaguar ashtrays make the Turbo II feel much classier!

Providing radio, cassette, and whatever audio source gets plugged into the FM modulator's inputs, this Audiovox deck was originally intended for use as an OEM replacement stereo for Chevy Berettas. It's a decent-sounding unit for $10 new on eBay.

The cassette deck pumps sound through a pair of JBL-made factory speakers pulled from a '93 Mercury Grand Marquis.

But when it's time for serious boombox listening enjoyment, you're better off with the groovous sounds of genuine 8-track! This Realistic unit still works great.

The 8-track plays through a pair of Dai-Ichi factory speakers from the same junkyard-bound '86 Toyota Tercel that provided the car battery at the heart of Turbo II.

That thing right above the 8-track deck is a cup holder from a '90 Toyota Tercel.

Since every car these days comes with numerous cup holders, you figure a serious boombox needs at least one.

Like Flava Flav, the Turbo II Junkyard Boogaloo boombox always knows what time it is, thanks to this VDO quartz clock from an '84 Volvo 245.

But some younger folks these days don't know how to read an analog clock (why, in my day, we didn't even have clocks- only heaps of dirt!), so the soothing blue rays of a Toyota digital clock have been added as well.

Not only do we need to know the time, we need to know the voltage. Even the mighty tank of amp-hours in the Turbo II's car battery can run low, so a '78 Audi's VDO voltmeter will let us know the score- if it drops below 12 it's time for a charge.

It would be very bad for a wiring problem to turn the Turbo II into a ball of fire, so all the power passes through this '91 Mitsubishi Galant fusebox (located on the rear panel).

Finally, what gives the Turbo II its turbo-ness? This Turbo emblem from an '84 Chrysler Le Baron Turbo, of course! For the complete run-down on how Turbo II got its Junkyard Boogaloo on, check out the Making Of feature, right here on Jalopnik!
Related:
Turbo II, Junkyard Boogaloo - Part 2: How To; If You Can't Buy It, Build It: Wanky The Safety Cat, Half-Price Day Junkyard Day [internal]









Comments
This just made my day. Bravo to whoever built it, and thanks for the feature on it.
This is amazingly cool. I can only guess that the Jag fuel button is to switch between gas tanks back when they had two.
Oh your god. This is awesomer than 10 Starionaminos.
awesome. awesome. awesome.
More Bondo...more...MORE!
Perfect.
Comeon.. where is the Cartier clock for that added bling?
those antennas power?
sweet box boys..
This was the planned dash and console for the second generation Pontiac Aztek wasn't it!??!
So are you going to cover it in orange shag or green indoor/outdoor carpeting?
You sure that's not R&D for the next Gen Jag's designed to appeal to the 1985 F150 demographic?
Now all you need is a piece of linoleum from the back of a 70's panel van, and you're set to have the ultimate parking lot break dance showdown!
I see no reason why this should not be mass produced. What a thing of beauty! Bravo!
Herbie Hancock Fan Club Approved! Rock it baby, Yeah!
Radical!
So what old station wagon or van is going to ferry this baby around the all the hot parties?
(BTW, no_slushbox was right - the Jag Fuel button switches between the two tanks)
I first read this this morning and I haven't stopped laughing yet.
This is more awesome than the three-speed reverse Fulda!
I can't seem to find the "buy it now" button? It's gotta be around here someplace. I just want to give them my money, and they are making things hard.
This is the pinnacle of awesomeness. Just made my day.
The power antennae and cupholders are my favorites.
Rock on!
This is recycling taken to an absurd but completely appropriate extreme! Why landfill perfectly functional audio gear? What this boombox might lack in practicality (90 pounds is pushing the bounds of "portable") it more than makes up for in humor. It also probably sounds a lot better than most of the cheap plastic toys which now pass for boomboxes in stores!
Too bad you couldn't find one of those mini-disc car stereos for recording capability.
Oh yes, Mandrill rocks!
@SLRSpeedshop: because its more fun to make your own. which i totally feel like doing.
this thing is awesome to the max!
"This thing started life as a Fuel switch for a '77 Jaguar (can anyone explain what happened to a Jaguar when you hit this button?)"
It would, uh, switch fuel tanks. 70s Jaguars had two fuel tanks, supposedly for that James Bond moment: "Honey, it looks like we're out of gas. Now we're stuck in the middle of nowhere with nothing to do." (Baby making session ensues.) "Oops, I forgot this car has a spare fuel tank..."
Executed with such brilliance and absurdity that it is perfect in every way!
I cannot begin to describe how awesome this thing is.
There are no words in either English or German that even begin to describe the awesomeness of that thing. That is recycling and consumer electronics design perfected.
Best thing I've seen in months.
Filed under: Gadgets, Time WarpIt's not often that a project of this magnitude crosses our computer screens.
Incredible DIY boombox, watch the video! Feast your eyes on the result of weeks of work using the various remains of over a dozen cars -- from 80's BMW's to a 1990 Toyota Tercel -- it's the glorious Turbo II Junkyard Boogaloo boombox.
Are you guys sure the Fuel button was to switch tanks? I'm pretty sure those had electric fuel-door releases, and I'm suspicious all that switch did was pop the release to the fuel door. My Range Rover('92) has a switch labelled "Fuel" and it just opens the fuel door.
The fact that the Range Rover even has a ELECTRIC fuel door release horrifies me. Every time I go to fill it up I push the button and find myself holding my breath until I hear the "click" about 5 seconds later.
Yes, it's definitely to switch fuel pumps (= tanks).
Those XJ's don't have fuel doors, but two oval chrome flip-up filler covers (one each side on the top of the rear wing / deck) which can be (un)locked with a key.
i want one.
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