Hi John, from watching your videos over the years , I learned how to read a schematic and to use a highlight pen to trace through when checking out components. Thankyou for that my friend,
Thanks, my friend. It's often astonishing how screwed up these old radios became over the years, almost as if the damage was deliberate. But the challenge to fix them is what keeps us in the hobby, huh? Regards, John
Thanks for the refresher, John. I still scratch my head occasionally following schematics containing multi-position switches like those of Fisher vintage tube stereo receivers.
Hi John, from watching your videos over the years , I learned how to read a schematic and to use a highlight pen to trace through when checking out components. Thankyou for that my friend,
Gordon,
Thanks, my friend. It's very good to hear. That's what these videos, mine and others, are all about.
Regards,
John
Tell em John, there have been radios that I worked on for months on and off, because there were weird issues or just a mess, YOU DON"T GIVE UP!
Thanks, my friend. It's often astonishing how screwed up these old radios became over the years, almost as if the damage was deliberate. But the challenge to fix them is what keeps us in the hobby, huh?
Regards,
John
On the next video, could you include the link for the Antique Radio Forum, in the video description? Google's results are confusing.
Vincenzo,
I just added it in this video's description block. Here it is again:
antiqueradios.com/forums/
Regards,
John
Thanks for the refresher, John.
I still scratch my head occasionally following schematics containing multi-position switches like those of Fisher vintage tube stereo receivers.
@@joernone Thank you very much sir!