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    • Bozak History
    • Bozak DL
    • CMA - 10 2D
    • CMA 10-RL
    • Other Products
    • Gallery
    • Spotting Fakes
  • Home
  • Bozak History
  • Bozak DL
  • CMA - 10 2D
  • CMA 10-RL
  • Other Products
  • Gallery
  • Spotting Fakes
Bozak USA

Bozak History

To state the Rudy Bozak company closed in 1988 is totally incorrect

To state the Rudy Bozak company closed in 1988 is totally incorrect

To state the Rudy Bozak company closed in 1988 is totally incorrect

  Rudy Bozak passed away in 1982, but son-in-law Don Parks along with investors Don Bowers and Sheldon Glick plus several other employees continued going forward. Beginning in 1983 design changes approved by Sheldon Glick suggested by Paul Hammarlund and Buzzy Beck included the DLA, DLB, and DLC. Even with modified updates to the original

  Rudy Bozak passed away in 1982, but son-in-law Don Parks along with investors Don Bowers and Sheldon Glick plus several other employees continued going forward. Beginning in 1983 design changes approved by Sheldon Glick suggested by Paul Hammarlund and Buzzy Beck included the DLA, DLB, and DLC. Even with modified updates to the original DL model mixer sales continued to dwindle. In 1988 no longer involving Don Parks the newly formed TAI company relocated in Florida until 1995 when everything remaining was sold.

The TAI Company

To state the Rudy Bozak company closed in 1988 is totally incorrect

To state the Rudy Bozak company closed in 1988 is totally incorrect

    In 1987 at Bozaks Connecticut location, owners Don Bowers and Sheldon Glick formed TAI designing  microphone and teleconferencing equipment. TAI become the carryover company headed by Sheldon Glick and began relocating in Florida with several original employees. In 1989 the Bozak name was eliminated and officially became TAI when the Florida move was completed.

Back in Connecticut

To state the Rudy Bozak company closed in 1988 is totally incorrect

Back in Connecticut

    What remained in Connecticut including inventory, tooling, furniture, and tons of paper records was a quite expensive move. Even with the speaker division previously sold there was to much remaining in the 45,000 square foot building. Other than schematics and rare paper work kept by a couple employees all registrations, warranties, f

    What remained in Connecticut including inventory, tooling, furniture, and tons of paper records was a quite expensive move. Even with the speaker division previously sold there was to much remaining in the 45,000 square foot building. Other than schematics and rare paper work kept by a couple employees all registrations, warranties, factory test records, receipts, supplier information, and thousands of documents were destroyed. The large truckload of various paper work was never shipped and supposedly disposed of in order to save moving costs.

The Move to Florida

To state the Rudy Bozak company closed in 1988 is totally incorrect

Back in Connecticut

    The reason for the move and company change from Connecticut was stated by partner and head engineer Shelly Glick who wrote “I walked into the office one morning and told my partner I was sick of the cold weather and moving to Florida.” Between 1988-1989 the two partners moved everything remaining Bozak to the newly form TAI company location in Florida.

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