This radio is the 'older brother' to GE's SuperRadio series. Built to be repaired; the tuning mechanism is a dream. But, GE seemed to cheapen out on the copper traces in this generation of radios. When loaded with 6 'D' batteries it's quite heavy; the '57 Buick of portable radios!
Love your “MOST - OFTEN - NEEDED” 1960 GE radio. LOL Laughed when I read that @ 25:35! Corrosion can be a killer for traces etc & specially battery terminals & salt air from living near a beach etc is a common thing too as my grandparents lived near the ocean & they were always getting their tv, radio etc repaired because of the salt air corrosion..........You have a good eye for finding these cool radios. :)xx
Corinna T Roberts76 "Most Often Needed" was the service information company (Beitman's in this case) telling the reader they picked this radio to document based on popularity.
Great video and diagnosis, Shango! KTNN broadcasts on 660AM from Window Rock, AZ which is right on the Arizona and New Mexico border. It's Class B station and transmits at 50k watts (probably during the day). That's pretty impressive you're able to pick that up from LA. The radio sounds pretty sensitive.
I had one in the Sixties. It was awesome! I used the light a lot in bed at night and was amazed at what distant stations I could receive. Yes, I am old.
Have restored and sold several of these at auction. One of my favorite AM portables. When aligned right, it's a hot DXer, almost as good as my GE Superadio but with much better audio. Love the almost tube-like sound and the 50s era chrome. The key to eliminating heterodyne and squealing is to dress the rod antenna leads carefully.
Great video! I had same problem on my Betamax VCR where the noise canceller board had the traces getting black. One evening, while watching a tape, the picture started to lose contrast and than faded to black. I had to add jumpers on the infected areas, because even after cleaning the copper, it could not be soldered, some traces even disappeared.
No doubt this party was over two years ago, still it's worth mentioning, this radio was not a P-780A. The ones with General Electric above grille are either 780E or F. This one is a '61/'62 E as it still had CD markings, F is same but lacks CD symbols. The 780A, B, D & G all have eight transistor above grille, with G version having whip antenna. P-780H states Long Distance & has a 9th transistor, excepting for H all have similar circuitry.
Great radio. I restore and resell alot of these on the 'bay. I've seen the gamut of circuitboard failures on these, I would have been questioning that same transistor too. Got one so bad that half of the traces had lifted off the PCB! They had alot of variations of this great radio, along with different PCB versions. Some of these have made me pull hairs getting going too - the outdoors stored ones as I call 'em. Usually a battery compartment scrub, main 500mfd capacitor gets them going each and everytime though. Great performer too. My favorite AM transistorio radio - 3 IF's , good sounding speaker and CHROME makes a winner in my book.
am skip is a wonderful thing!!! neat old radio! as a east coaster i receive wlw wcbs in Florida like thy are local!!! wlw gets out the best under all conditions. wold love to see it back on the air at 500,0000w as it was in the 1930s!!! take care good dx and off the key we gone.
Reminded me of the days back in the 80s where russian radio was detected by just touching the inputs of an amplifier and played nicely on the speakers. He.. of a strong signal they had. Nice repair.
Love the video. Great radio. Thanks, Shango!! Strange problem with the copper trace just dissolving. Also that B+K 970 is BOSS! If you ever want to sell it, I'm your guy. I'm weird liked that. I like the test equipment better than the equipment it's designed to test. I was a calibration tech (metrology lab) back in the day.
That's a very good lesson when you're diagnosing something pay attention to the big picture that capacitors are always not the culprit of the problem that you have to take it apart and do some examination cosmology 101 that's what I learned from this video, I like the radio station from New Mexico
I thought it was the oscillator too as soon as I heard the amp working, that could have become a real mess if you hadn't caught the grounding issue...great troubleshootin' there! Never seen a trace just evaporate like that, WTF!
I had a new in the box radio from the 70's that didn't work because it had 4 green caps like that with crystals all over it. All of them were the same value, I replaced them and it worked great.
When it comes to assessment/diagnosis or repairs, I somehow love these vintage radio topics shango066 does. I liked that 1948 Zenith console radio he repaired recently - it sounded great after a lot of fiddling and re-alignment of the IF. Solid state or tube, if it's a radio made in the 60s or 70s, shango will surely have it. This is no exception. GE made decent gear back then. I'd like to see another EOL of a cheap 90s Chinese plastic crap product one day, done 'shango style'.
I'd like a desert comparison of many of the commercially available radios from about 2000 to 2020 compared to the old faithful ones. Maybe even try a quieting or signal to noise test in the A-B comparisons. God Bless
Reminds me of the fix I did for our Dolby sound system subwoofer. Did some tapping on the circuit board and the speaker came to life. Ended up finding solder points that had cracked. Reflowed and added a touch more solder fixed it. My father would tap circuit boards in TVs to find loose ground connections.
Cool DXing! Interesting troubleshooting of a strange problem. Not to mention the radio sounds EXCELLENT. I'm going to invoke the "they don't build 'em like they used to" cliche as I'm dis-fond of the throw-a-way culture.
Very informative video as usual Shango. Thankyou for taking the time on another transistor which are my favorite and enlightening us all to the proper diagnosis techniques that you employ. Use your gut lol
21:30 Shango says, "This is our oldies station. No commercials." Before he finishes UA-cam hits me with two commercials. One was visit San Diego and get some strange drinks. The other was for..... I think a movie? God Bless
_The Navajo AM 660 is KTNN._ TX is in northeastern AZ, near the NM state line. And you are picking it up in Los Angeles. Pretty good with a 60 year old portable AM set. 50 kW non direction by day, 50 kW directional due west at night to protect WFAN in NYC. That means the signal will be concentrated west at night or even during "critical hours" for KTNN.
(20:40) Image interference would cause heterodynes like that, with the offending station being 910 KHz above the one you want to listen to - but in your radio, it's really bad, especially for a radio with a TRF stage. You probably need more of those jumpers to provide a proper connection for the tuning caps. One or more transistors could be self-oscillating, or something may be allowing shortwave signals into the mix - where they could heterodyne with *harmonics* of the local oscillator.
Ive never seen mesh over the speaker like that before, cool idea. it sounds like almost as if a ground is missing. id give the pcb a good spraying with contact cleaner and and old toothbrush to reveal where the breaks in the traces are and it will greatly simplify things.
that screen over the speaker and the tubing over the antenna wires are different for GE, the usually skimp on those kind of details...must've been an old American made design.
HI shango066, can you explain what silver mica disease is? all i know its to do with the cracking noises heard through the speaker. and can it occur on newer technology, as i have heard that sounds on a amplifier i have?
Where I live many radios have that kind of heterodyning noise on 540 kHz from a radio station up on 1450 kHz from Port Huron, MI. In that part of L.A. it appears to happen on a few places on the dial. Car radios and the Sony Super Sensitive line of radios mostly dodge this kind of interference because they often do not use the typical 455 kHz I.F.
I don't own one of those, but I know they are well regarded for DX'ing. I have two Sears Silvertone model 6223 in tan, 6224,5 olive and black respectively service number 528.622301 that look very similar with the big cast speaker grill. They have wonderful full sound that reminds me of cars in the 1960's and 1970's with the one 6"x9" speaker booming in the dash or rear deck and have great sensitivity and selectivity. It is provisioned with a jack for D.C. power and another under the battery compartment cover for external antenna. 6 "D" cells for power. God Bless
How odd, wouldn't of thought a copper trace could fail like that, it could have been anywhere, pure luck it was a ground and you noticed it, would have been a pig if it was out of reach or something, nice work....cheers.
Will you buy Audacy stock once it lists again? They presently own KNX (AM) your favorite radio station. Yes, you have an image between AM 570 caused by AM 1480...I need you to record some of that for me for a presentation. I had the same thing in Rochester NY with AM 550 from Buffalo which would "get the beat" from AM 1460 in Rochester. 1480-910 (2 x IF freq.)= 570 kHz SAME AS 1460= 550+910 kHz (2 x IF). Yes, I moved the terms around but the math still holds.
Wish that oldies station would be on SW with enough power to get to the UK, even if its only at night!! Just a question, where could one get a MW broadcast crystal (or three) to build 0.25W to 5W transmitters to use in the car? AM is slowly being shutdown but i love to transmit my old shows to my tube car radio!
This radio is the 'older brother' to GE's SuperRadio series. Built to be repaired; the tuning mechanism is a dream. But, GE seemed to cheapen out on the copper traces in this generation of radios. When loaded with 6 'D' batteries it's quite heavy; the '57 Buick of portable radios!
Indeed it is! You could kill someone, hitting them with this radio. ha!
sure is a nice radio. the designer Conrad Jutson said this was one of his favorite radios he was a part of while working for G.E.
Jutson indeed was the man, IMO.
Love your “MOST - OFTEN - NEEDED” 1960 GE radio. LOL
Laughed when I read that @ 25:35!
Corrosion can be a killer for traces etc & specially battery terminals & salt air from living near a beach etc is a common thing too as my grandparents lived near the ocean & they were always getting their tv, radio etc repaired because of the salt air corrosion..........You have a good eye for finding these cool radios. :)xx
Corinna T Roberts76 "Most Often Needed" was the service information company (Beitman's in this case) telling the reader they picked this radio to document based on popularity.
Walt's Channel - Oh ok, I thought it was like a promo thing that would be displayed in a magazine/catalogue advertisement. :)
another magnificent repair. you could probably make a living doing this.lol all your videos are so teaching. keep going!!! thanks rd
They are really great for d.x. ing. I consistently picked up Las Vegas, A Canadian station, and Des Moines Iowa.
Great video and diagnosis, Shango! KTNN broadcasts on 660AM from Window Rock, AZ which is right on the Arizona and New Mexico border. It's Class B station and transmits at 50k watts (probably during the day). That's pretty impressive you're able to pick that up from LA. The radio sounds pretty sensitive.
I had one in the Sixties. It was awesome! I used the light a lot in bed at night and was amazed at what distant stations I could receive. Yes, I am old.
LOL
Have restored and sold several of these at auction. One of my favorite AM portables. When aligned right, it's a hot DXer, almost as good as my GE Superadio but with much better audio. Love the almost tube-like sound and the 50s era chrome. The key to eliminating heterodyne and squealing is to dress the rod antenna leads carefully.
Shango, he bring good G.E. radios back to life!
living in new england, we are no strangers to finding green death in wires, connectors, and traces... such is life :/
That thing should be a good DXer. What a whopper of an antenna ❗️
🙂
Spider in the dial is a classic. Now you can say that you've got a vintage radio receiver.
I had one of those. Great DX radio, worth aligning.
I'm looking for a dead one of these to resurect. I could do without the spider. Your video should help. Thank you for sharing!
Hi merry christmas
ABDUL. IRAQ. BAGHDAD
Great video! I had same problem on my Betamax VCR where the noise canceller board had the traces getting black. One evening, while watching a tape, the picture started to lose contrast and than faded to black. I had to add jumpers on the infected areas, because even after cleaning the copper, it could not be soldered, some traces even disappeared.
No doubt this party was over two years ago, still it's worth mentioning, this radio was not a
P-780A. The ones with General Electric above grille are either 780E or F. This one is a '61/'62 E as it still had CD markings, F is same but lacks CD symbols. The 780A, B, D & G all have eight transistor above grille, with G version having whip antenna. P-780H states Long Distance & has a 9th transistor, excepting for H all have similar circuitry.
Nice radio, good catch on that weird problem, that's some colorful corrosion there.
Very good repair lesson. "Keep the big picture" is a very valuable hint. 👍
Good stuff. I grew up on the Navajo rez. My dad still listens to KTNN.
Great radio. I restore and resell alot of these on the 'bay. I've seen the gamut of circuitboard failures on these, I would have been questioning that same transistor too. Got one so bad that half of the traces had lifted off the PCB! They had alot of variations of this great radio, along with different PCB versions. Some of these have made me pull hairs getting going too - the outdoors stored ones as I call 'em. Usually a battery compartment scrub, main 500mfd capacitor gets them going each and everytime though. Great performer too. My favorite AM transistorio radio - 3 IF's , good sounding speaker and CHROME makes a winner in my book.
am skip is a wonderful thing!!! neat old radio! as a east coaster i receive wlw wcbs in Florida like thy are local!!! wlw gets out the best under all conditions. wold love to see it back on the air at 500,0000w as it was in the 1930s!!! take care good dx and off the key we gone.
Looks very well built. Good sized speaker too.
Reminded me of the days back in the 80s where russian radio was detected by just touching the inputs of an amplifier and played nicely on the speakers. He.. of a strong signal they had.
Nice repair.
Love the video. Great radio. Thanks, Shango!! Strange problem with the copper trace just dissolving. Also that B+K 970 is BOSS! If you ever want to sell it, I'm your guy. I'm weird liked that. I like the test equipment better than the equipment it's designed to test. I was a calibration tech (metrology lab) back in the day.
I have one just like it out in my shop.It worked the last time I used it.
That's a very good lesson when you're diagnosing something pay attention to the big picture that capacitors are always not the culprit of the problem that you have to take it apart and do some examination cosmology 101 that's what I learned from this video, I like the radio station from New Mexico
Used to have one of those, best radio for DXing I ever had.
I thought it was the oscillator too as soon as I heard the amp working, that could have become a real mess if you hadn't caught the grounding issue...great troubleshootin' there! Never seen a trace just evaporate like that, WTF!
That radio has great sound and sensitive too.
Wow, KTNN from Window Rock, AZ, that's some AM DX for you.
That radio is a keeper. If he pulled in KTNN from the drift of nearby KFI, that’s a good,sensitive set.
I too am in Southern California, To get Window Rock you have to have a set with a tuned RF stage.
I had a new in the box radio from the 70's that didn't work because it had 4 green caps like that with crystals all over it. All of them were the same value, I replaced them and it worked great.
Yo compre uno igual se oye bien bonito saludos desde Tepic nayarit México
I really enjoyed (and will try it myself) your aural analysis of the capacitors. Also, another great troubleshooting video. Thank you.
KTNN is in Window Rock, Arizona (right on the New Mexico border), which is about 540 miles away from L.A.
Awesome I have one of these. Was my grandfather's radio. Still works but no AM stations in my area anymore. Only DX at night.
Yay a new shango066 video!
I have one of these in great condition. Works and sounds great.
Your videos are great and informative, thank you.
Nice troubleshooting. Glad you got it going. Thanks for sharing.
Wow. Circuit board failure and it looked perfectly alright. Good one.
When it comes to assessment/diagnosis or repairs, I somehow love these vintage radio topics shango066 does. I liked that 1948 Zenith console radio he repaired recently - it sounded great after a lot of fiddling and re-alignment of the IF.
Solid state or tube, if it's a radio made in the 60s or 70s, shango will surely have it. This is no exception. GE made decent gear back then.
I'd like to see another EOL of a cheap 90s Chinese plastic crap product one day, done 'shango style'.
Blow up a Crosley Cruiser with an M-80 firecracker
I'd like a desert comparison of many of the commercially available radios from about 2000 to 2020 compared to the old faithful ones. Maybe even try a quieting or signal to noise test in the A-B comparisons. God Bless
Reminds me of the fix I did for our Dolby sound system subwoofer. Did some tapping on the circuit board and the speaker came to life. Ended up finding solder points that had cracked. Reflowed and added a touch more solder fixed it. My father would tap circuit boards in TVs to find loose ground connections.
Cool DXing! Interesting troubleshooting of a strange problem. Not to mention the radio sounds EXCELLENT. I'm going to invoke the "they don't build 'em like they used to" cliche as I'm dis-fond of the throw-a-way culture.
They really don't build'em like that anymore...good old American chrome and steel
Very nice radio, built like a tank!
TEAC Fan except for the corrosion
I have one, also the AM/FM which I am restoring. We also have a commercial free AM oldies station, sounds great on this radio.
Those are excellent radios.
Very informative video as usual Shango. Thankyou for taking the time on another transistor which are my favorite and enlightening us all to the proper diagnosis techniques that you employ. Use your gut lol
21:30 Shango says, "This is our oldies station. No commercials." Before he finishes UA-cam hits me with two commercials. One was visit San Diego and get some strange drinks. The other was for..... I think a movie? God Bless
_The Navajo AM 660 is KTNN._ TX is in northeastern AZ, near the NM state line. And you are picking it up in Los Angeles. Pretty good with a 60 year old portable AM set. 50 kW non direction by day, 50 kW directional due west at night to protect WFAN in NYC. That means the signal will be concentrated west at night or even during "critical hours" for KTNN.
That's great to know I just got an p780E from ebay. At 7pm I'm picking up WTTN, KOH and KDXU. KDXU, the futurist is 675 miles from Orange county CA
So happy ur back fixing stuff
Descent looking chrome plated.pot metal of the era . Must have been a jewel when it was new .
Cost about a weeks wages
@@yubamarkstedman7336I wondered, it certainly feels expensive
(20:40) Image interference would cause heterodynes like that, with the offending station being 910 KHz above the one you want to listen to - but in your radio, it's really bad, especially for a radio with a TRF stage. You probably need more of those jumpers to provide a proper connection for the tuning caps. One or more transistors could be self-oscillating, or something may be allowing shortwave signals into the mix - where they could heterodyne with *harmonics* of the local oscillator.
@ 15:37, “You Broke Up With Me” by Walker Hayes.
Ive never seen mesh over the speaker like that before, cool idea. it sounds like almost as if a ground is missing. id give the pcb a good spraying with contact cleaner and and old toothbrush to reveal where the breaks in the traces are and it will greatly simplify things.
I think the mesh over the speaker is to give it base reflex. It sounds better than any other portable this size
Very nice...very American with the chrome
Loved this video. Keep it up
I think that this radio was at least on the sea shore quite a bit OR out on a boat a lot !!!!! The radio sounds great though after the fix !
Decent little radio.
that screen over the speaker and the tubing over the antenna wires are different for GE, the usually skimp on those kind of details...must've been an old American made design.
Great content as always!
Thanks for the great vid even let the ad play :)
HI shango066, can you explain what silver mica disease is? all i know its to do with the cracking noises heard through the speaker. and can it occur on newer technology, as i have heard that sounds on a amplifier i have?
search my channel, lots of very detailed videos on it
Where I live many radios have that kind of heterodyning noise on 540 kHz from a radio station up on 1450 kHz from Port Huron, MI. In that part of L.A. it appears to happen on a few places on the dial. Car radios and the Sony Super Sensitive line of radios mostly dodge this kind of interference because they often do not use the typical 455 kHz I.F.
I❤everything abut radio.
Amazing radio
I don't own one of those, but I know they are well regarded for DX'ing. I have two Sears Silvertone model 6223 in tan, 6224,5 olive and black respectively service number 528.622301 that look very similar with the big cast speaker grill. They have wonderful full sound that reminds me of cars in the 1960's and 1970's with the one 6"x9" speaker booming in the dash or rear deck and have great sensitivity and selectivity. It is provisioned with a jack for D.C. power and another under the battery compartment cover for external antenna. 6 "D" cells for power. God Bless
Good video. Have you got other similar radios that pick up that station in New Mexico?
Might have been in a humid environment, also look at the chrome on it.
Wow that thing must have come from the jungle or a saltwater boat somewhere. That's a first for me,even in the humid southeast
Didn't you push that "Lite" button?
I like that BK 970 cool test jig.
Must have been in the window by the ocean.
How odd, wouldn't of thought a copper trace could fail like that, it could have been anywhere, pure luck it was a ground and you noticed it, would have been a pig if it was out of reach or something, nice work....cheers.
Nice Radio
What about a BC212L PNP transistor are low noise for the low power stages and 2x AD162s for the output push pull stage.
Philips used to cover speakers like that aswell
With the RF stage this should really be a good DX radio.
oh nice combo there old 60's radio and some beatles track playing just pass the lsd and weed/pot and we'll enjoy the 60's once again
Great video
Shango IS the best
Craig Nehring - I know.
Thanks for shareing
That bug 🕷 in the radio 📻
Love your old shaggy coat-lol!!!!
Hey Shango...What'r you wearing...a friggin' towel? Another great vid from the socal radio guy btw.
wacoflyer what are you talking about? The carpet on the table?
These old eyes must be playing tricks. My apologies.
Ooooh Shango in a towel!....I would love to see that. 😍......Oh wait, it’s just carpet on the table! LOL 😂
Corinna T Roberts76 forbid the creepy hue hef in a bath robe look
+wacoflyer
if you mean his sleeve, that looks like some kind of fluffy jumper/sweater he has on - not a towel. I've seen it before.
Long live K-surf, 1260
I assume the arachnid is still entombed in it's transparent gravesite?
Thank you...from Philippines
Good day what is number of transistor with b+ wire red and coil #3? Help please
Very strange indeed. This is a first for me to. I guess i needed to see it to believe it.
Lovely!! thank you. interesting problem
Esa si es maquina
Had a life on a boat in saltwater?
Sounds good.
maybe there's supposed to be a negative voltage value on that tracer
I get the feeling you can pick up KNX on your fillings in your part of the world.
so 1st thing to do is change all capacitors, then if it does not work, change them again?
Dave WM LOL
use the yellow ones..if they don't work, go to the orange ones
Will you buy Audacy stock once it lists again? They presently own KNX (AM) your favorite radio station.
Yes, you have an image between AM 570 caused by AM 1480...I need you to record some of that for me for a presentation. I had the same thing in Rochester NY with AM 550 from Buffalo which would "get the beat" from AM 1460 in Rochester. 1480-910 (2 x IF freq.)= 570 kHz SAME AS 1460= 550+910 kHz (2 x IF). Yes, I moved the terms around but the math still holds.
Soros owns it now
@@shango066 Ha, ha...
Wish that oldies station would be on SW with enough power to get to the UK, even if its only at night!! Just a question, where could one get a MW broadcast crystal (or three) to build 0.25W to 5W transmitters to use in the car? AM is slowly being shutdown but i love to transmit my old shows to my tube car radio!
How much a working one goes for? I have one
An offer on EBay last year was seventy-five for an 'A model. Clean unblemished chrome and all knobs.
someone posted on a forum that retrochad has died :( is this true?
same area different spelling, different chad.
Ahh ok, here we have...