Moving it from the box to its place on my bench felt like an act of care. I wiped each surface with an old cloth, not out of necessity but as a ritual — an acknowledgment of the device’s prior existence. In that small domestic ceremony I found myself projecting stories: a radio operator in a rain-slicked harbor tuning frequencies at three in the morning; a studio tech in the hush before a session, making micro-adjustments that would later be lost in mixes; a traveler who packed it between passports and postcards. Each imagined owner left fingerprints on the object’s character, even if only metaphorically.