My dad bought the Early American cabinet version of this set. It was our first color tv, delivered in December of '68. The deliveryman told my dad to wait an hour to let it warm up (winter, in Detroit) before plugging it in. When it was turned on, 'Daniel Boone' was on. The first color tv show I had seen. The scene was of an angry crowd with torches, surrounding a moonlit log cabin. Yeah, it was that big of a deal! I even sat thru mom and dad's 60-minute Lawrence Welk torture without heckling because the color was beautiful. Saturday morning's cartoons were awesome!
Such a beautiful set, and with ultra-low hours. Zenith is definitely my all-time favorite brand of televisions. I love the CR7000. This is my first CRT tester... and the restoration functions on it work quite well. My worst case was a near dead Motorola Works in a Drawer. Had to hit it on the extended setting but it bounced back and is holding with excellent emissions.
I saved my customers thousands of dollars over the years by restoring their CRTs when possible instead of replacing them. Often, I could squeeze several extra years of decent life from a CRT using the Sencore revuvenator. It was an art and special skill to use it to best advantage.
As a kid I used to go to my neighbors house every day after school and we would watch American Bandstand on a Zenith Color tv. Later on I went with my dad and we bought a RCA color set in 1968.
Hey... that looks exactly like the model my parents had when I was a kid... wow... I'm getting goosebumps. My mother only bought Zenith when it came to televisions! ;)
Wow, that's all ancient history now. I used to be a Zenith dealer and they were a great company to deal with. Completely honest and they never tried to cheat their dealers or their customers. Those were the days!
I had that same model TV back in 1997 for a few months. One of the tenants in my apartment building moved out and left it in the hallway. I didn't know it was from 1969. It had a good picture but the contrast was a bit too dark.
Consoles are making a come back. Not even kidding here, the demand is impressive. I've had people come into my collectibles store asking for'em. They're charming, wholesome, warm and beautiful. Thanks to HDMI converters, we can watch stuff on it.
That looks like a really nice tv you have there. I was really impressed with the quality of the color and most of all the condition it's in. It looks like it just came out of the box.
I do not know much about tv restoration but i do enjoy watching these types of videos regardless. I have a question however....what is that brownish discoloration(?) encircling the viewing area of the CRT?
That's what's called a 'cataract'. Large picture tubes had a piece of safety glass attached to the front with a gel-like adhesive, which discolors over time.
@dmine45 I can tell you the yellow stain isn't caused from smokers. The old Zenith set I have has that and no one ever smoked around it, been in a smoke free house since it was new. I can't tell you what causes the ring, however.
I have an old Zenith tv similar to yours. Mine has the "tuning fork" remote, "stereo sound" and even has the same yellow ring around the picture tube. It hasn't been turned on in years, it did work fine, except after it was on for about 20 minutes, the sound would cut out.
@lazimofo90 So true! And so sad that sets like this were--and are being--tossed out by the truckload. That TV''s cabinet styling would look good with any living room furniture ensemble I've ever seen. By contrast the crap that's sold today has all the style of a 99 cent picture frame. Just pathetic. :(
.They used to have free technical support for Sencore owners. If you had a question about how to use their stuff I'd make a free call and talk with with a Sencore tech. They also had free Seminars where they would demonstrate the use of their test gear.
I noticed when you did the life test you did it before the emission test was finished. You should wait until the emission is finished then perform the life test. Great tv though!
@pskittle488 None of the big manufacturers were using paper and wax capacitors by 1969, they had already switched over to mylar and ceramic caps by then. The electrolytics can be a problem however, but those aluminum twist cans are quite reliable.
Excellent video. I'm curious though, weren't you concerned about bad capacitors (eletrolytic and paper/wax) when you powered it up? Would it need this service?
I always used the low or auto mode on my older sencore, if it didn't work the first time I'd do it again, I think it's best to use the low settings if possible.
This is a very nice television. I have watched your videos about picture tube cateract removal, but I'm curious to know about the yellowing around the border of the picture tube. What is the yellowing coloring and what causes that to occur. Gary
That yellow/green discoloration around the edge of the picture tube is the type of cataract you get with Zenith picture tubes. They used a different adhesive to bond the safety glass to the front of the tube.
I'm looking for a nice old Zenith record player. The last one I bought had been neglected for too long. Any advice or do you have any for sale? Great video by the way. Very informative.
Honestly, I have tried to find the same UHF transmitter but had no luck. Although I have found the name and everything but they do not sell them anymore which sucks because I wanted to do the same. It is called a Video Sender WV-300.
Lol.. :) no worries Doug, just giving you a hard time, I always enjoy your videos. I check a few times a week to see what you got new. Do you have any console stereos from the mid to late 50's era? Have a good week Doug. Mike
Awesome !! Nice Zenith TV with an Interesting circuit board with all the upright connector pins. That is a very nice CR7000 test set too. That is a delta gun ?
Your right about zenith televisions there great made. Whats your view on the zenith televisions that had space phone in them . I always thought they where cool . Wish I had one if I had the room for it ,
@1972jeepcommando I'm wondering as well. Were the former owners smokers and that's tobacco stains? Or is that some sort of discoloration of the picture tube after 42 years? (BTW, the TV was made the year I was born!)
They weren't kidding when they called this a $ervice $aver Chassis!!! In my time as a TV service tech I saw very few problems with these compared to sets using printed circuits.
With these older tv sets there is no discharging of the crt right? You can safely just pull off the neck board? I thought I seen older tv's that doesn't have anode cups. Thanks
Ha!! "Blair Witching". I'm gonna steal that one. I used to say "MTV-ing". That's kinda dated, so it kinda needs a little update there... but then again, oh man I just realized "Blair Witch" is like 20 years ago now. Holy crap I'm traveling through time at the rate of one year every year
Well i used to have that same model when I was younger, bought it from a swap meet for $25 so I could play nintendo on back in 1986.. It eventually was replaced by a solid state set which sat on top of this one for years until I ended up junking both in the mid 90's and getting a newer CRT set. Now I have big flatscreens, no need for power hungry, heat generating sets like these anymore. Yes these were good sets but their time has come and gone..
+ElfNet Gaming Big flatscreen sets generate quite a lot of heat, and also use a lot of power. Plus they tend to be quite cheap, which results in them failing before they should. The only advantage the big flatscreen TVs have over the old CRTs is the sheer resolution.
MrMaguire IDK I have an LED based flat screen and it does not generate much heat at all and draws only 65 watts. Older flat screens did make alot of heat and Plasma sets, OMG they were like a furnace! Common failure mode in a flat screen is the power supply caps if your smart and immediately examine and replace the cheap caps with quality ones when you get the set you will not have it fail in 6 month. BUT the normal consumer is not going to do that.... Flat screens MAIN advantage it they have a space advantage over ANY CRT set also, You can put a flat screen set anywhere, on the wall, desk even the ceiling. You cant do that with a CRT without major modification and reinforcement. Even a large flat screen set is more versatile and portable than a CRT set. Of course we can go into the tree hugger advantages of the CRT producing x-rays and emissions crap too but I never believed that was an issue. I like the old CRT sets for some things but none of them can get the new DTV signals and I am NOT a fan of converter boxes.
ElfNet Gaming I'll take all of your points there. I don't think my back can take moving another 32" FD Trinitron, lol. I still prefer CRTs though. I use LCDs for computer monitors and CRTs for everything else.
the sencore tv tester . Can you use that same tester to test the tube of a modern sony crt television set . Just wondering it will work with them . The tubes are all the same right at least for the Trinitron tube
where did you get the uhf sender idea i swear i talked to about that maybe 1-2 years ago on maritimes channel in the comment section and where did you get your i had to construct mine
I remember the day I fried my grandad's tv by turning on the switch too fast.. actually I did it twice! Sad days.. then I got a tv from k-mart that later started acting posessed, then my dad gave me his mitsubishi which later broke.. *crt assassin*
My dad bought the Early American cabinet version of this set. It was our first color tv, delivered in December of '68. The deliveryman told my dad to wait an hour to let it warm up (winter, in Detroit) before plugging it in. When it was turned on, 'Daniel Boone' was on. The first color tv show I had seen. The scene was of an angry crowd with torches, surrounding a moonlit log cabin. Yeah, it was that big of a deal! I even sat thru mom and dad's 60-minute Lawrence Welk torture without heckling because the color was beautiful. Saturday morning's cartoons were awesome!
Such a beautiful set, and with ultra-low hours. Zenith is definitely my all-time favorite brand of televisions.
I love the CR7000. This is my first CRT tester... and the restoration functions on it work quite well. My worst case was a near dead Motorola Works in a Drawer. Had to hit it on the extended setting but it bounced back and is holding with excellent emissions.
I saved my customers thousands of dollars over the years by restoring their CRTs when possible instead of replacing them. Often, I could squeeze several extra years of decent life from a CRT using the Sencore revuvenator. It was an art and special skill to use it to best advantage.
As a kid I used to go to my neighbors house every day after school and we would watch American Bandstand on a Zenith Color tv. Later on I went with my dad and we bought a RCA color set in 1968.
its nice to see some one working on the same sets i worked on in the mid 70's keep up the good work
Like the once mighty steel cars that were made in America this strudy reliable televison was also a pioneer of America.
I used to fix those many years ago and while they can have a great picture I think I prefer RCA sets. My oldest color tv is an RCA CTC5 from 1957.
Hey... that looks exactly like the model my parents had when I was a kid... wow... I'm getting goosebumps. My mother only bought Zenith when it came to televisions! ;)
Wow, that's all ancient history now. I used to be a Zenith dealer and they were a great company to deal with. Completely honest and they never tried to cheat their dealers or their customers. Those were the days!
An old tv guy out of joliet area, this brings back some real memories.
Another great video Doug. 1969 my favorite year. The good old days.
Pice of dream!!! Beautiful!!!
I had that same model TV back in 1997 for a few months. One of the tenants in my apartment building moved out and left it in the hallway. I didn't know it was from 1969. It had a good picture but the contrast was a bit too dark.
After all this years and this still looks great.
Doug has a very professional way of speaking to the camera about what he is documenting about. I love it.
Consoles are making a come back. Not even kidding here, the demand is impressive. I've had people come into my collectibles store asking for'em. They're charming, wholesome, warm and beautiful. Thanks to HDMI converters, we can watch stuff on it.
Truly amazing! And with that big speaker and cabinet, the audio sounds great too -- lots of bass.
i could watch just about anything on this tv and it would be cozy and relaxing! enjoyable :)
That looks like a really nice tv you have there. I was really impressed with the quality of the color and most of all the condition it's in. It looks like it just came out of the box.
I'll also bet the sound on that thing is great too, compared to tv's made in the last 20 years. The wood cabinet makes tv's sound so much better.
Why does music sound way cooler through a tv? So nice!
Thats a great TV, i love when i see something old and in like new condition
I do not know much about tv restoration but i do enjoy watching these types of videos regardless. I have a question however....what is that brownish discoloration(?) encircling the viewing area of the CRT?
That's what's called a 'cataract'. Large picture tubes had a piece of safety glass attached to the front with a gel-like adhesive, which discolors over time.
@dmine45 I can tell you the yellow stain isn't caused from smokers. The old Zenith set I have has that and no one ever smoked around it, been in a smoke free house since it was new. I can't tell you what causes the ring, however.
That is a nice find. Well worth the buy. I do love them council Tv's.
I have an old Zenith tv similar to yours. Mine has the "tuning fork" remote, "stereo sound" and even has the same yellow ring around the picture tube. It hasn't been turned on in years, it did work fine, except after it was on for about 20 minutes, the sound would cut out.
The days when you had to go on Channel 3 to view something from your VCR. Those were the times...
love how these sets were made.they don't make em like that anymore
OMG, I've not seen one of those chassis in about 30 years!! Think I still have NOS tubes for it too boot!
I think my parents had this set in the 70s
very nice tv nice tester too :) great video keep up the good work
"The quality goes in before the name goes on"
I wish the CR7000 had been around back in the '70s. I would love to see it work on a nearly dead crt.
Nice big oval speaker in there. A far cry from the tiny 3 inchers in today's flat panel tvs.
I used to have the older model sencore crt tester, used it many times and it worked well. used to work in a repair shop.
@lazimofo90 So true! And so sad that sets like this were--and are being--tossed out by the truckload. That TV''s cabinet styling would look good with any living room furniture ensemble I've ever seen. By contrast the crap that's sold today has all the style of a 99 cent picture frame. Just pathetic. :(
.They used to have free technical support for Sencore owners. If you had a question about how to use their stuff I'd make a free call and talk with with a Sencore tech.
They also had free Seminars where they would demonstrate the use of their test gear.
I'm glad I was able to entertain you
Wow! Nice set! Are you planning to get rid of that yellowing around the outer edges of the tube?
Great television doug. You know where the zenth plant in chicago was at right .
Amazing find! Thanks for sharing it!
I noticed when you did the life test you did it before the emission test was finished. You should wait until the emission is finished then perform the life test. Great tv though!
@Turkeydoodlers
Oops! Haha. I screw up my talking alot when Im preoccupied trying to analyze a TV and be a good narrator at the same time.
Does this set have the cataracts that you have talked about in past videos?
@pskittle488 None of the big manufacturers were using paper and wax capacitors by 1969, they had already switched over to mylar and ceramic caps by then. The electrolytics can be a problem however, but those aluminum twist cans are quite reliable.
Dude your lucky that you have a Zenith CRT TV :D.
i wish i had a CRT and not a plasma TV :(
I'm guessing that "waxy yellow build-up" around the screen edges must have something to do with the wearing down of the CRT screen.
Excellent video. I'm curious though, weren't you concerned about bad capacitors (eletrolytic and paper/wax) when you powered it up? Would it need this service?
I always used the low or auto mode on my older sencore, if it didn't work the first time I'd do it again, I think it's best to use the low settings if possible.
This is a very nice television. I have watched your videos about picture tube cateract removal, but I'm curious to know about the yellowing around the border of the picture tube. What is the yellowing coloring and what causes that to occur.
Gary
That yellow/green discoloration around the edge of the picture tube is the type of cataract you get with Zenith picture tubes. They used a different adhesive to bond the safety glass to the front of the tube.
I wonder..if that Sencore was around in those days of old, if more old TV's would still be used to this day.
Awesome TV!!!!
I'm looking for a nice old Zenith record player. The last one I bought had been neglected for too long. Any advice or do you have any for sale? Great video by the way. Very informative.
I just recently bought a B&K 455 CRT tester, I'm hoping that I'll be able to learn how to use it seeing as it only has one meter.
Doug, what causes that green halo around the edge of the screen and can that be corrected?
now thats a good television set there not one of those flimsy looking modern lcds like I have
What is that UHF thing? I want something like that so I can use old tv's without video inputs because of the digital tv conversion.
Honestly, I have tried to find the same UHF transmitter but had no luck. Although I have found the name and everything but they do not sell them anymore which sucks because I wanted to do the same. It is called a Video Sender WV-300.
remember how to fix this set for color burst problems?
I will miss you.... static.
Lol..
:) no worries Doug, just giving you a hard time, I always enjoy your videos. I check a few times a week to see what you got new. Do you have any console stereos from the mid to late 50's era?
Have a good week Doug.
Mike
Awesome !!
Nice Zenith TV with an Interesting circuit board with all the upright connector pins. That is a very nice CR7000 test set too.
That is a delta gun ?
Not a circuit board. It is all hand wired that Zenith was proud to advertize.
What causes the dip/curl at the top of the picture?
this tv is a solid state tuner and an array of compactrons maybe a 1969 model.
Does that CR7000 have any HR Trinitron CRTs in its master list?
see my zenith space command still works i blew the dust out but some paint of the tube fell on the board will it be a problem
I love to see that
It's a beauty. Is it still possible to get singles through UHF cable connectors on these TVs?
and ya while vintage CRT testers have their charm.. getting a late model that has virtually every CRT in a database it way easier.
Your right about zenith televisions there great made. Whats your view on the zenith televisions that had space phone in them . I always thought they where cool . Wish I had one if I had the room for it ,
@1972jeepcommando I'm wondering as well. Were the former owners smokers and that's tobacco stains? Or is that some sort of discoloration of the picture tube after 42 years? (BTW, the TV was made the year I was born!)
Hey that phone on the ground do you have a video on it???
Retro
They weren't kidding when they called this a $ervice $aver Chassis!!! In my time as a TV service tech I saw very few problems with these compared to sets using printed circuits.
I don't know that much about such old TVs, but why are the edges yellow, but the TV is supposedly almost brand new?
With these older tv sets there is no discharging of the crt right? You can safely just pull off the neck board? I thought I seen older tv's that doesn't have anode cups.
Thanks
What about Japanese Tubes, Mitsubishi brand etc, does this analyzer support those tubes aswell or just the ones listed in the manual
So for the crt's that used a cap I would imagine you would have to discharge the cap before removing the neck connector?
Please get a tripod you're blair witching me to death, great video though.
Ha!! "Blair Witching". I'm gonna steal that one.
I used to say "MTV-ing". That's kinda dated, so it kinda needs a little update there... but then again, oh man I just realized "Blair Witch" is like 20 years ago now.
Holy crap I'm traveling through time at the rate of one year every year
Well i used to have that same model when I was younger, bought it from a swap meet for $25 so I could play nintendo on back in 1986.. It eventually was replaced by a solid state set which sat on top of this one for years until I ended up junking both in the mid 90's and getting a newer CRT set. Now I have big flatscreens, no need for power hungry, heat generating sets like these anymore.
Yes these were good sets but their time has come and gone..
+ElfNet Gaming Big flatscreen sets generate quite a lot of heat, and also use a lot of power. Plus they tend to be quite cheap, which results in them failing before they should.
The only advantage the big flatscreen TVs have over the old CRTs is the sheer resolution.
MrMaguire IDK I have an LED based flat screen and it does not generate much heat at all and draws only 65 watts. Older flat screens did make alot of heat and Plasma sets, OMG they were like a furnace!
Common failure mode in a flat screen is the power supply caps if your smart and immediately examine and replace the cheap caps with quality ones when you get the set you will not have it fail in 6 month. BUT the normal consumer is not going to do that....
Flat screens MAIN advantage it they have a space advantage over ANY CRT set also, You can put a flat screen set anywhere, on the wall, desk even the ceiling. You cant do that with a CRT without major modification and reinforcement.
Even a large flat screen set is more versatile and portable than a CRT set.
Of course we can go into the tree hugger advantages of the CRT producing x-rays and emissions crap too but I never believed that was an issue. I like the old CRT sets for some things but none of them can get the new DTV signals and I am NOT a fan of converter boxes.
ElfNet Gaming
I'll take all of your points there. I don't think my back can take moving another 32" FD Trinitron, lol. I still prefer CRTs though.
I use LCDs for computer monitors and CRTs for everything else.
Can I use parts salvaged from one of these to make a guitar amplifier
very well ,i like zenith tv :)
What's the green color around of the edges
the sencore tv tester . Can you use that same tester to test the tube of a modern sony crt television set . Just wondering it will work with them . The tubes are all the same right at least for the Trinitron tube
where did you get the uhf sender idea i swear i talked to about that maybe 1-2 years ago on maritimes channel in the comment section and where did you get your i had to construct mine
you still making videos?
That a killer deal for $5. What's that saying? Like finding diamonds at a rummage sale?
Thanks for the video, but I hope someone has given you a tripod since 2011, this is great but difficult to watch.
I remember the day I fried my grandad's tv by turning on the switch too fast.. actually I did it twice! Sad days.. then I got a tv from k-mart that later started acting posessed, then my dad gave me his mitsubishi which later broke.. *crt assassin*
Excellent tv .In french is not compatible system Pal!
What's that yellow around the screen?
zenith tv sets are easy to fix
Are you the same guy that sells turntables on ebay? Your voice sounds like his.
i have a zenith crt it's small
LET US WATCH THE STOOGES
CURLY LARRY MOE
Actually it's July Doug lol..
❤ television vintage ❤❤❤❤❤eric de France 😃😃😃❤
i thought it was much newer than a 1869 tv set... :-)
*классный у тебя телик*
That is a nice find. Well worth the buy. I do love them council Tv's.