When he was about 10 years old, Amar Bose went on a camping trip with his Boy Scout troop where he earned merit badges, like the Radio Badge shown here. At camp, he experienced what he said was a life-changing moment. One of his fellow campers had brought along a do-it-yourself kit consisting of an antenna that, when pounded into the ground, enabled the boys to transmit their voices through the air from one point to another. This was young Bose’s first introduction to radio; many years later, he would recall that this was where his love of electronics and technology was born.
Amar Bose had a fascination with electric trains. However, due to his family’s financial situation, they were only able to afford to buy used trains that were almost always in need of repair. He discovered that the process of making something electrical and mechanical work again gave him almost as much pleasure as the trains themselves.
“We put up signs in all the little hardware stores where my father used to sell his imported goods. The signs said, ‘We repair radios.’ So people would drop off their radios at the store and I’d take them home and repair them, and we’d give the store 10% of the invoice. I had a little pact with my father that if my grades remained good, I could go to school only four days a week, and he would write an excuse saying I had a headache or something. The teachers all knew this; it was always on a Friday and so on Monday, they’d ask me, ‘How many radios did you fix, Bose?’”
— Amar Bose describing his radio repair business
Many of Bose’s breakthroughs began while listening to music. One such breakthrough came while Dr. Bose was listening to a record on a new sound system he purchased to reward himself for finishing his PhD. The system looked great on paper, but Dr. Bose’s ears told him differently. Despite the perfect specs, the system’s sound reproduction was poor. Now, Dr. Bose was determined to find out why. He asked Dr. Wiesner, his mentor from MIT, if he could use the RLE’s acoustics lab over the summer to investigate. Thus began an exploration into the psychoacoustics of sound that would become one of the bedrocks of Bose Corporation.
By the time he was 13, Amar Bose had developed a strong interest in electronics and had learned how to fix broken radios. When his father’s import business collapsed during World War II, the teenager supported the family by repairing radios out of his parents’ basement. The business grew to be one of the largest radio repair services in the Philadelphia area during the war.