Massive 1954 Motorola 24 inch Black And White Console Television

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  • Опубліковано 12 лис 2021
  • attempted to resuscitate old TV, not all are saveable
    If you wish to support the insanity:
    / shango066
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 267

  • @stevenarrasmith7540
    @stevenarrasmith7540 2 роки тому +73

    This was my grandma's TV she gave us so us kids could watch it in the basement. I still remember sitting on the floor and watching Alan Alda do the promos for a new show coming out called MASH.

    • @raccoon681
      @raccoon681 2 роки тому +6

      this very one or same model?

  • @radio-ged4626
    @radio-ged4626 2 роки тому +9

    Shame about the tube. I remember my parents rented a 24" b&w tv when I was a little kid. Watching the tv engineer fix it is what got me interested in electronics and my first job was an apprentice tv engineer.

  • @thomaskitz1185
    @thomaskitz1185 2 роки тому +17

    When I was in High school I worked for a Dumont dealer who was in his 80's. This dealer had a really nice 30 inch tv that you mentioned, it was HUGE. Every year he used to display it at the county fair.

    • @SudaNIm103
      @SudaNIm103 2 роки тому

      The "DuMont Royal Sovereign" ‽ Can't post links in the comments, but if you google that, picture should come up.

  • @obsoletebutneat
    @obsoletebutneat 2 роки тому +10

    Come into my parlor, said the spiders to the flyback.

    • @mileshigh1321
      @mileshigh1321 2 роки тому

      That set was loaded with them! Even at the end, one of them resected and was moving about! Haha!

  • @JacGoudsmit
    @JacGoudsmit 2 роки тому +54

    I would think the reason that CRT's are measured diagonally is because they started out being round, so the size was basically the diameter. Then manufacturers found ways to make them square-er, so they would fit in smaller cases, but the most important measurement would still be the distance between the corners. I don't think that's cheating.

    • @edwatts9890
      @edwatts9890 2 роки тому +5

      When my wife and I married in 1973, our first television was one exactly like this one (except it had its back!). It was a gift from my father-in-law, and we used it for several years.

    • @edwatts9890
      @edwatts9890 2 роки тому +3

      Dumont Royal Sovereign (1951) had a 30" CRT.

    • @jimlocke9320
      @jimlocke9320 2 роки тому +4

      I agree. My Dad was a GE employee and bought a top of the line console "Ultravision" TV in late 1954, similar in appearance to shango066's Motorola. It was designated 21", but that was the corner to corner measurement of the CRT. The viewable diagonal was about 20". A common portable TV measurement was 17" with viewable diagonal of 16".
      TV sets had a safety glass in front of the CRT, to protect room occupants from flying glass should the CRT implode. Spontaneous implosions did occur. I recall a statistic of about 50 a year with millions of TV sets in use. In the early 1960s, the bonded CRT went into production, with the safety glass bonded to the CRT. The improved integrity allowed manufacturers to push the corners out, so a 17" CRT became a 19" with more of the picture corners visible but not increasing the size of objects on the screen.
      In the late 1960s, a Federal Law was passed which required manufacturers to measure the viewable picture, addressing the "cheating". A 19" screen became a 18" screen. It was hard for salesmen to explain that a new TV with 18" screen had the same size as the customer's old 19" screen. Manufacturers tried to eliminate the diagonal measure and quote square inches of viewable area. That did not go over well with customers, either. A next generation of CRTs was developed, basically increasing picture size. A TV might be labelled 20" with the additional notation "Designated 21" in Canada". (Canada didn't pass a similar law.)
      The story on the bonded CRT: Corning Glass Works was making the CRTs and Pittsburg Plate Glass made the safety glass. Corning worked with adhesive manufacturers to develop the clear bonding adhesive, allowing them to make a CRT and safety glass assembly, taking the safety glass business away from Pittsburgh Plate Glass.

    • @directcurrent5751
      @directcurrent5751 Рік тому +1

      Correct

  • @nathanlewis5682
    @nathanlewis5682 2 роки тому +27

    When I was a kid in the 80s I looked forward to Saturdays because of Saturday morning cartoons like Bugs Bunny and the Road Runner and coyote.
    Nowadays it's Saturday morning, Shango066 just dropped a video.

    • @rancherfarmerguy
      @rancherfarmerguy 2 роки тому +1

      Nowadays I just look forward to making another day. Heh

  • @kimpetersen2848
    @kimpetersen2848 2 роки тому +9

    How sad it had to end like this. I've been looking forward to this set in particular since Shango let us all have a peek at it a while back. I really would have liked to see this Moto rise and shine

  • @ESDI80
    @ESDI80 2 роки тому +26

    One of Motorola TVs I restored had this same issue, 100% dead CRT. It did produce a picture and had a heater to cathode short. I was able to source a replacement CRT and restored the TV as I really wanted to save the TV. The cabinet is all Bakelite. I also have my grandfather's 21" Motorola TV and it had a rebuilt CRT in it when I got it. Motorola really did aim for serviceability as both my TVs are just as easy to pull the chassis as yours was. Since I rarely ever plug my Grandfather's TV in, I just recapped it but I never changed out the seleniums. When I restored the other TV, I used a wire wound resister that had a sliding tap on it to adjust the resistance. I used this to get the voltage where I needed it after installing silicon rectifiers.

    • @jamesstout3430
      @jamesstout3430 2 роки тому +6

      same. EVERY Motorola B&W set I've ever run across has had a stone cold dead CRT. EVERY SINGLE ONE.

    • @greggaieck4119
      @greggaieck4119 2 роки тому +3

      what a Kool 1954 motrola back and white console tv when I lived at home with my mom and dad mom and bout a motrola cloard tv console in 1963

  • @jeff32276
    @jeff32276 2 роки тому +18

    Whenever Shango posts a video it makes my day.

    • @ver64
      @ver64 2 роки тому +2

      Same feeling here 👍🏻

  • @johnhermes9296
    @johnhermes9296 2 роки тому +2

    My dad had a Zenith radio & T.V. repair shop in the fifties when I was a kid. I remember him picking up a radar crt tube from the army surplus for like $3.00 and making a wood cradle and several wiring harnesses so he could work on the chassis on the bench and have a picture tube right next to him. I'm 68 and love watching you work!

  • @KameraShy
    @KameraShy 2 роки тому +7

    As a kid, we had a ca. 53-54 GE B&W TV that was really massive. It went through numerous service calls and CRT replacements until we got fed up and replaced it ca, 1964 with a Zenith 19" luggable from Polk Bros.
    By the 70's. I was working for Motorola and they are out of the TV business. The MOT always made solid iron. Well engineered and built. But business management was less than solid.

  • @JohnnyUmphress
    @JohnnyUmphress 2 роки тому +12

    Boy how I would love to adopt that set. But I just cannot afford the shipping costs. You come up with so many great sets that I can only dream of finding. Being on social security makes my tv hobby tight.
    Thank you for offering these marvelous old sets rather than disposing them.

  • @randyab9go188
    @randyab9go188 2 роки тому +6

    Tacky ass gimmicky antenna setup. Give that man a cigar! 😁

  • @randystegemann9990
    @randystegemann9990 2 роки тому +4

    Diagonal measurement of picture tube screens made them fairly compatible with older round screen tube measurements.

  • @davek12
    @davek12 2 роки тому +4

    Having watched one get resurrected which spent 20 years in the desert, i'm surprised to see this one stay dead.

  • @mchill07
    @mchill07 2 роки тому +2

    Greatly appreciate the wealth of knowledge you provide. I really look forward to the videos you post. It’s given me the confidence to take on a ‘59 Magnavox B&W combo unit I just rescued. Thanks so much!

  • @Trev0r98
    @Trev0r98 2 роки тому +5

    Nothing like catching a little torkocrinkulator action on UA-cam.

  • @lorenrobertson8039
    @lorenrobertson8039 2 роки тому +3

    That looks exactly like the one that my great grandfather had in his home! Wow! I love console TV's and miss them dearly. We had a beautiful Magnavox TV in a real cherry wood cabinet. It was part of our furniture. We took good care of it. It was the focal point of our living room and where you might put a special decoration for Christmas, or your report card, etc...

  • @danschreffler1280
    @danschreffler1280 2 роки тому +4

    "It looks like a little city" - Bjork -

  • @vintageradios7790
    @vintageradios7790 2 роки тому +4

    Here is more food for thought. In the early 1960s 1961 1962 Magnavox made a 24in television floor console. If you can get your hands on one of those that tube I am sure will fit in this Motorola TV. The neck of the Magnavox tube is thinner so you will need to change the CRT socket but otherwise the Magnavox tube is a 6 volt tube and it should work out if you can get your hands on one. Just some food for thought in case you really want to restore this Motorola. This Motorola is a really really nice TV to get going

  • @brainndamage
    @brainndamage 2 роки тому +32

    It would be an interesting experiment to try to zap the tube back into conducting. Charge a high voltage cap about 1-10nf to 1-2kv and connect it to the cathode and grid. Maybe that would zap it enough to where you could use the beltron.

    • @Mister_Brown
      @Mister_Brown 2 роки тому +7

      i've done that with filaments on radio tubes before when i had no options for replacement, i have an electrophoresis power supply with 100-3000v constant current constant voltage output at 300w, if you dial it to 2kv and set the current to 5ma it will dump a short pulse of power into a short then regulate at 5ma.
      this won't work here because you'd need a ton more voltage, the grid is easily 3-5mm from the cathode and in a vacuum thats gonna need 100+KV to bridge, a better attempt would be to go from filament to cathode where the distance is about 1mm or less still you're gonna need 20-40kv to bridge that and you're probably just gonna blow everything up.
      another thing he could try is flipping tube upside down so the cathode wire is on top and tapping

  • @scharkalvin
    @scharkalvin 2 роки тому +17

    Dumont made a 30" B&W back in the 50's. It was a glass/metal roundie, probably a 50 to 70 degree deflection type. Tube was similar to the type 19AP4, except almost twice as large!

    • @mileshigh1321
      @mileshigh1321 2 роки тому +2

      Love to see him find one of those!!

    • @xenaretos
      @xenaretos 2 роки тому +2

      And here I was, intending to post about a Soviet 65cm (25.6") black-and-white TV from the 70s.

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 2 роки тому +2

      Damn, 30" round?!

    • @mileshigh1321
      @mileshigh1321 2 роки тому +1

      @@xenaretos Like to see that soviet tv too!

    • @mileshigh1321
      @mileshigh1321 2 роки тому

      @@volvo09 In the early 50's! I am used to seeing the smaller or round screens from back then!

  • @volvo09
    @volvo09 2 роки тому +6

    You gave it your best shot on that CRT... I was hoping to see the high voltage be the issue. Must have been a smokey fiery show for the family using it!
    HANK! THE TV IS ON FIRE AGAIN!

  • @petemiksich5760
    @petemiksich5760 2 роки тому +5

    Motorola always did things their own way. Another example would be the "Placir" circuit board. I had a 23 inch color 909 chassis that still worked strong when I retired it in the late 1970's.

  • @ryanfulldark2775
    @ryanfulldark2775 Рік тому +1

    This channel is so freakin awesome! Thanks for showing us this stuff!

  • @kc4cvh
    @kc4cvh 2 роки тому +2

    I would have stopped when I saw the crumbling yoke, as it is irreplaceable. Once I read a brochure for equipment to graft new necks onto CRTs with bad guns, doubtless someone still has this, but it seems very unlikely there is a new neck for this jug in existence anywhere.

  • @mattrowan2680
    @mattrowan2680 2 роки тому +1

    My dad worked for Motorola from early 50's (Augusta Blvd in Chicago) and from about 1961 or so he worked at their new factory and hq on Grand Ave in Franklin Park IL. He worked his way up from line worker to regional area warranty service tech. He and one other guy were the techs that were put on very difficult repeat warranty issues (particularly with the Quasar solid state stuff). As for this tv, we had the exact cabinet version of this tv but it must have been a year or two newer because it had 3 knobbed controls exposed (bright, vert, hor) where your set has a cover. It definitely didn't have that antenna gimmick. What I have always remembered about this tv was the sound quality. It had (I think) an 8" round speaker that had incredible very clean bass response with good volume output. I don't recall this tv causing problems and we used it until we got the new rectangular 25" color console sometime in the mid-late 60's. Then my dad gave the b&w to my uncle and he used it in his rec room right up to the 70's. My dad use to say that to be one of their engineers you had to be a genius to get hired lol.

  • @fredflintstone8048
    @fredflintstone8048 2 роки тому +4

    Measuring picture tubes diagonally is a win - win. Not only is it the longest dimension but it accounts for any variation of aspect ratio by being able to ignore those. A right triangle of course has one dimension for the hypotenuse, but the two sides can be various lengths. Measuring and reporting those can be somewhat ambiguous so we like the dimension of the hypotenuse instead...
    A shame about the picture tube. Would have been a nice restoration project. I agree the quality was there, but back then those sets cost a family a fortune. They were a fairly major investment for a family.

  • @razbinn
    @razbinn 2 роки тому +5

    Shango's videos rock.

  • @alex1520
    @alex1520 2 роки тому +4

    ive seen bob andersen fix a tube once with a similar issue, and he used a trick where he heats it up big time, gives it a knock and it welds the broken connection internally back into place again

  • @Hiphopasaurus
    @Hiphopasaurus 2 роки тому +32

    I have the 21" version of that, though maybe it's the 1955 version. It has a super-early germainum diode detector (which sadly was leaky). The 21ALP4 CRT on mine is the original and was totally dead when I found it - however - following your teachings, I whacked the neck and did several jolts of rejuve and it finally woke up enough to produce a picture. Virtually all paper caps were dead shorts and the tuner required a very deep cleaning, but it's actually a great little performer now. Too bad about this one though!

    • @MrHBSoftware
      @MrHBSoftware 2 роки тому

      what was the symptom of the leaky detector diode? all my sets use germanium didoes as detector generally the oa81 type

    • @Hiphopasaurus
      @Hiphopasaurus 2 роки тому +4

      @@MrHBSoftware If I recall, replacing the diode resulted in better contrast and overall better picture. The schematic on mine shows it was a CK706 (it was red, Raytheon branded I think) and I replaced it with an 1N60.

    • @timothykeith1367
      @timothykeith1367 2 роки тому

      Is it possible to rebuild the picture tube on these?

    • @mohinderkaur6671
      @mohinderkaur6671 2 роки тому +1

      @@timothykeith1367 Antique radio society in New Jersey does it. Search their videos

  • @televisionforever
    @televisionforever 2 роки тому +2

    I restored an RCA 21-S-548NU floor model and the chassis slides out very easily just like this set. Everything plugs into the chassis and the picture tube stays in the set. I have it working beautifully and the serviceability it has is unmatched so far. Only downside is I have to put the chassis back in the cabinet and hook everything back up before seeing if the image is better. I really admire Zenith Porthole sets where the picture tube stays on the chassis so you only have to put it back in the cabinet when you know everything is working correctly. I wish more companies today made their tech equipment as serviceable as tube equipment.

  • @donaldsmalleypublishing401
    @donaldsmalleypublishing401 2 роки тому +2

    I saw a live Dumont commercial with Wally Cox that had a 30 inch screen. Wally Cox got nervous and froze. Saved by another actor.

  • @maplewoodsp
    @maplewoodsp 2 роки тому +1

    Pictures in Sams were shot on 8 X 10 film. My wife and I used the Deardorff camera. My wife also used the newer Deardorff and other equipment residing in my basement these days.

  • @bandersentv
    @bandersentv 2 роки тому +19

    There were a few 27" B&W sets made using either the metal cone 27AP4 or all glass 27EP4, 27GP4, 27NP4, etc.. Both 24 and 27 inch sets are very hard to find now. I've only seen one in person and it was too dam big to fit in my hatchback :(

    • @johnnytacokleinschmidt515
      @johnnytacokleinschmidt515 2 роки тому +1

      I had a beat up Magnavox as a kid. It was big and ugly and I didn't keep it. Along with many round colors. I want them back!

    • @force311999
      @force311999 2 роки тому +1

      you would be perfect to adopt this set the cabinet is in nice shape for its age
      no desert rot

  • @ukrainehamradio
    @ukrainehamradio 2 роки тому +9

    I did this sometimes, but the Soviet CRT were of such low quality that it did not last long. But this set at least deserves the restoration of the cabinet for a museum or a thematic interior.

  • @richardweinberger2756
    @richardweinberger2756 2 роки тому +7

    Kinda like the car industry which always advertised the horsepower of engines using unreal methods.

  • @jimdavis6833
    @jimdavis6833 2 роки тому +1

    That's called a directional antenna, dude. It was back in the day before onmi - directional ones came out. I can remember as a youngster having to get on the roof and rotating our antenna after a storm came through. We had 3 different ones on the same mast, one for each channel. Yes, all we had was ABC, NBC and CBS local stations. We had one UHF station operated by the local Junior College and used rabbit ears to get that one. That 24"er would have been state of the art back then.

  • @8080pc
    @8080pc 2 роки тому +2

    Would have never got to see these old sets, thanks Shango!

  • @69Dartman
    @69Dartman 2 роки тому +1

    I had a combination Magnavox with stereo and 15 inch speakers and 27 inch tube, probably early 60s. I had to get a rebuild for it and they needed my old tube to do it. It had a reasonable picture when it was done but I was just starting out and screwed up the alignment thinking I could tune it up like a radio. Between that and it kept popping like it had a high voltage problem I ended up scrapping it. A friend took the woofers and built some speakers with them that he thought sounded awesome till we started actually realizing what decent sound was. My tube was a 27XP4 if I remember right. Wish I had some of the antiques I was playing with back then.

  • @mushroombeast5092
    @mushroombeast5092 2 роки тому +2

    My parents got a new set similar to this one in 1961, I think they called it a 23 inch; that was the largest size available then, I think. The cabinet was almost the same, but I never saw the chassis. It was a relatively cheap set, since it didn't have a UHF tuner. We got the VHF Chicago channels, and local channels thru an older set top UHF converter box leftover from the old TV that died(a 1953 Crosley).

  • @ronaldspencer547
    @ronaldspencer547 2 роки тому +4

    I remember that was the last black and white my parents had in the early 60's. A gift from the grandparents I believe. Then we got a 13 inch color tv which we watched the moon landing on.

    • @bobwoodhouse9178
      @bobwoodhouse9178 2 роки тому +1

      The first moon landing was only in black and white.

    • @8080pc
      @8080pc 2 роки тому +1

      I had a black and white up till 2009. Used during the many hurricanes we had in the summers as it would run off a 12V battery. B&W seemed to make the sharpest picture at the time.

  • @robertwhite9898
    @robertwhite9898 2 роки тому +4

    I hope it can be saved .

  • @tomb8185
    @tomb8185 2 роки тому +4

    Am pretty sure that is the exact same set my Grandpa had in his living room. I didn't work and had a colour TV setting on top of it. Made a nice TV stand.

    • @ESDI80
      @ESDI80 2 роки тому +3

      My grand parents never tossed their 1950s set when they stopped using it. It stayed in the format living room until my uncle passed away and the house was sold. I now have the TV in my possession and it lives again.

  • @mjg263
    @mjg263 2 роки тому +3

    Aw, too bad. I love Motorola stuff and it would’ve been great to see this monster work again. I’m surprised the PhotoFact service folder mentioned a UHF provision, I thought this was made way before we even had the set-top converter boxes.

  • @vintageradios7790
    @vintageradios7790 2 роки тому +12

    It may not be to difficult to replace that 24in tube with a 23 in tube with a shroud around the 23 in tube to compensate for the one in difference. You are a smart intelligent creative person I am sure you can figure it out. Some kind of thick rubber border around the 23 in tube will definitely compensate for the space. Try it you have nothing to lose at this point that is a beautiful looking set. Plus you have the patience of a saint. If anybody can do it you can.

  • @directcurrent5751
    @directcurrent5751 Рік тому

    The antenna dial reminds me of the MARRIED WITH CHILDREN episode where the kids had to stand in specific positions to make the rabbit ears work.

  • @dr.detroit1514
    @dr.detroit1514 2 роки тому +1

    About 15-20 years ago, I had a look at a mid 50's 27" either Magnavox or Motorola B & W console tv the people across the street where throwing out. Unfortunately, the crt neck was broken, and the back and knobs missing. I passed on it. To me, it's disheartening when I have an otherwise good working tv, but the picture tube is bad, and no replacements.

  • @thomaslucas6403
    @thomaslucas6403 2 роки тому +5

    We had one of these when I was 12 to 13. I have a picture of me taken on my 13th birthday with the TV in the background. My brother and I used to go purchas TVs at a local thrift store they would keep them in the as is area towards the back storage area of the thrift store. You just pick your choice of any tv for five dollars a piece. We got home and plugged it and it played like new the CRT was in great shape. It would have been junk if it haven't played I was a little 12 year old and my brother was a 17 year old dimwit. He's still dimwitted to this day just a much older dimwit.

  • @murasakitokuroneko7554
    @murasakitokuroneko7554 2 роки тому

    Sometimes turning set upside down helps weld the cathode, when cathode fails tend to fall down over, tapping right way up drives them further apart, upside down helps bring it back into contact

  • @AgentDiego
    @AgentDiego 2 роки тому +7

    For resurrection you could actually use filament as a cathode, though it should be transformerly isolated and the picture would be blurry and meh, but it might work

  • @guruoo
    @guruoo 2 роки тому +1

    I still have my parents' old '54 Zenith console cabinet, that bears a striking resemblance to this Motorola. Have a future project idea to mount a modern flat panel TV-monitor in place of the screen, with a mini AV receiver behind the flip-down control panel below it. Dragnet, American Bandstand, Lone Ranger, ect. are a few of many first run programs brought to me through this set as a child.

    • @mikehall3976
      @mikehall3976 2 роки тому

      Wait a little while until we have reliable organic light emitting diode sets. Otherwise, that sounds like a fun project and I think it would really be a centerpiece of your living room.

  • @zx8401ztv
    @zx8401ztv 2 роки тому +3

    Deader than a dead thing, R.i.p C.r.t

  • @doctorwacky5680
    @doctorwacky5680 2 роки тому +6

    My parents had one of these monsters in their basement, my dad worked on that thing constantly he was a TV repair man part time. There were always issues with the power supply, he finally got irritated with it and I helped him take it to the dump

  • @joseph9770
    @joseph9770 2 роки тому +2

    That bird in the background at 20:07 sounds like someone cranking a tiny engine...

  • @mecamaster
    @mecamaster 2 роки тому +1

    The reason they measure diagonally is for fair comparison between round and rectangular sets, Since round sets with a mask on have a smaller usable area then a rectangular set measured horizontal/ verticaly

  • @pyeltd.5457
    @pyeltd.5457 2 роки тому +2

    the bronze metal makes me feel fuzzy

  • @markanderson350
    @markanderson350 2 роки тому +7

    I used to work on video games. They came out with these monster cabinets using 32 and 36 inch tubes. Previously we had 27 inch. I noticed the large CRT would always go dim in a year or two. After 5 years, you could not see the screen. Is it possible, they use the same gun and it is over powered for such a large screen?

  • @tectalabyss
    @tectalabyss 2 роки тому +2

    Cool set Shango0. All my best. Oh and hope you can get it to work some at least.

  • @VintageRadioRepair
    @VintageRadioRepair 2 роки тому +4

    Sizzle pony crackle point🤣🤣🤣

  • @johncooke9655
    @johncooke9655 2 роки тому +1

    I love your sense of humour, I fix Covid testing robotics in the biggest lab here in Ireland for Perkinelmer, which can be fairly intense, but I will take your sense of humour in with me next time I’m in the lab on a PITA repair! Thanks from one engineer to another Pád.

    • @shango066
      @shango066  2 роки тому +2

      a job that should be secure for many years to come...

  • @Masterkill45588
    @Masterkill45588 2 роки тому +1

    Ah yes the movable antenna...that probably is asbestos

  • @murrij
    @murrij 2 роки тому +3

    3:47 I miss the days where it was expected that the vendors provide all docs if you want to repair on your own. Right to Repair FTW!

    • @albertpintor3522
      @albertpintor3522 2 роки тому

      I got a 1965 packard bell rpc-39 stereo console two weeks ago but the power amp needs a rebuild and the turntable needs a relube but the preamp/tuner part is still good so I use a nad integrated hooked up as a stand alone power amp, but when I get it fixed, I would not be surprised if it outlasts most modern electronics in my house

  • @SDRickandTanya
    @SDRickandTanya 11 місяців тому +1

    Klooky Doobler! Gonna be my exclamation for the day. :)

  • @elloellogamingpeahen
    @elloellogamingpeahen 2 роки тому

    you legend been looking forward to a new video from you :) sending love from the uk !!!!!!!

  • @justincase3880
    @justincase3880 2 роки тому +2

    Flyburn & “black beauty” for the win …

  • @fathermarin1177
    @fathermarin1177 2 роки тому +3

    Used to watch Johnny Carson with grandma in the den on a set just like that 😢 but never letterman because grandma said he was vulgar !

  • @K31TH3R
    @K31TH3R 2 роки тому +1

    24:40 As someone who does component level repair on modern PC's, that looks like an absolute nightmare to me. Like someone ignited thermite on top of their component storage and after it worked it's way down through all the drawers of parts, that's what coalesced at the bottom. I would have loved to have seen one of these actually assembled, I don't know how the schematic isn't just a picture of a plate of spaghetti and meatballs.

  • @walterbatman7949
    @walterbatman7949 2 роки тому

    Beautiful piece

  • @johnnytacokleinschmidt515
    @johnnytacokleinschmidt515 2 роки тому

    I was fortunate to save a 24 inch Crosley slated for disposal. Only a half a day in the rain. It was passed over due to weak CRT. I haven't checked it out for myself. It still displays wonderfully even if it doesn't play. It's like a refrigerator cut in half for a size comparison.

  • @kinasc1575
    @kinasc1575 2 роки тому +1

    "Sizzle pony crackle point"
    Man that had me laughing.

  • @fehlrock
    @fehlrock 2 роки тому +1

    Remember when 25" TV was HUGE ? Now my 60" LG seems excessive...

  • @gdadamos2302
    @gdadamos2302 2 роки тому

    I have a very similar GE cabinet shell I found at curbside pick-up. I put 2 pieces of 1-inch pink styro down and slid my 19" color SANSUI unit into it, Just the right height for the remote to work, only drawback is the A/V outputs are on front, need some 90-degree RCA jacks so I can get the tube right tight to the oval screen.

  • @williamstevens7090
    @williamstevens7090 2 роки тому +4

    That schematic has fossils.

  • @remingtonhutchison55
    @remingtonhutchison55 2 роки тому

    @10.00 mins "crunchy crunchy" I lost my shit LMAO!!!

  • @theDaftman
    @theDaftman 2 роки тому

    All them dead spiders inside the flyback, ones minds blown lol

  • @hardcorecommandreloaded3905
    @hardcorecommandreloaded3905 2 роки тому +1

    Hey Shango
    My grandfather had the same set
    It was in the basement and it still worked...i can remember watching
    cartoons on the thing...sadly he died from a stroke 8 years ago and the set was sold at the estate sale :(
    If only I had the thing I would find a way to ship it to you for a restoration!!!... Awesome video!!!...

  • @AiOinc1
    @AiOinc1 2 роки тому

    Absolute beauty of a set! Wish I had somewhere to put a machine like this.

  • @cgeorge6786
    @cgeorge6786 2 роки тому

    No academy award for you that needle was supposed move at the end for dramatic effect but didn't even budge.

  • @edwardmills8020
    @edwardmills8020 2 роки тому

    The two-rectifier arrangement was used with a center tapped power transformer secondary for full-wave rectification. I was tempted to buy a pair of those old-fashioned selenium "grates" in new OEM condition from our local electronic supplier to see if they'd have less switching noise than the modern potted bridge rectifiers I use in my little tube audio projects, but the price stopped me cold in my tracks.

  • @bonkers5016
    @bonkers5016 2 роки тому

    This was top of the line! Love it! ❤

  • @Amp497
    @Amp497 2 роки тому

    My family owned a television like this made in the 50s, which I viewed as a small child in the 60s. I believe ours was an RCA. Brings back memories.

  • @hansblooeyribbon4207
    @hansblooeyribbon4207 2 роки тому

    There's an old Toshiba CA 550 TV on the curb in my Rancho Park neighborhood. 3 other CRT types also.

  • @krz8888888
    @krz8888888 2 роки тому +3

    Can't win them all, no connectiom when you are tapping on it means it cannot be welded back ?

  • @acatisfinetoo3018
    @acatisfinetoo3018 7 місяців тому +1

    That is ashame that the tube is completely dead...hopefully it was repurposed.

  • @KongKingman
    @KongKingman 2 роки тому +2

    The 1954 Bowman baseball card set looks very similar for their border lines

  • @bones007able
    @bones007able 2 роки тому +1

    Gotta RCA that looks like this... must have been a popular furniture design of the 50's....

    • @obsoletebutneat
      @obsoletebutneat 2 роки тому

      Yep, I thought this one was the same as the 1954 Magnavox I've got, so much so that I had to double-check. The control panel is different, but it is remarkably similar in style otherwise.

  • @Stoney3K
    @Stoney3K 2 роки тому +4

    Any chance of getting a replacement CRT instead of this fish tank?

  • @stevehead365
    @stevehead365 2 роки тому +4

    Shame about the tube. Are dead spiders essential for correct operation of the high voltage?

    • @earthlingjohn
      @earthlingjohn 2 роки тому

      Yes ! They are considered sacrificial 😁

  • @VintageRadioRepair
    @VintageRadioRepair 2 роки тому +2

    Still, that would be a nice one to work on!

  • @vancouverman4313
    @vancouverman4313 2 роки тому

    Nice looking TV, Motorola had nice clean designs.

  • @usernameg5
    @usernameg5 2 роки тому +2

    intresting video though wasn't an actual rescue. just out of curiosity, what is the difference in the beltron between rejuvenate and restore?

  • @buddegennaro8695
    @buddegennaro8695 2 роки тому

    The Dumont TV my parents had in the '60's was in a blonde wooden cabinet on 4 legs. We constantly slapped the side of ot to get it to work better and the tubes were always failing.

  • @nozmoking1
    @nozmoking1 2 роки тому +1

    I seem to recall being sent out on a call for a 27" B&W in the 70's but don't remember what brand or CRT manufacturer.

  • @NuffMan_
    @NuffMan_ 2 роки тому +4

    Maybe something like a Speaker coil connected to the crt neck could be used with a signal generator to make the parts inside the gun resonate and start working again?
    I have "fixed" plenty of old lightbulbs by tapping them etc to make the broken wire inside make contact and self-weld itself back in place, not the same thing but i imagine a broken wire could do the same inside the crt

  • @robertmitchell2142
    @robertmitchell2142 2 роки тому

    I have a picture of my dad's 1950's appointment and he had a table top black and white set, but not sure of the make but can't post it here in UA-cam test entries.

  • @goldenboy5500
    @goldenboy5500 2 роки тому +2

    looks like the Emerson when I growing up

  • @christhurman9102
    @christhurman9102 2 роки тому

    That's a nice set

  • @johndewey6358
    @johndewey6358 2 роки тому

    Cool Antenna!

  • @SquantoTerror
    @SquantoTerror 2 роки тому

    2:53 Black beauty…For the WIN!