Adding Bluetooth to a vintage radio
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- Опубліковано 3 кві 2018
- Adding Bluetooth to a vintage radio doesn't mean you have to rip the chassis apart. You can turn a vintage radio into a Bluetooth speaker without wrecking the radio. Never destroy a piece of history!
- Наука та технологія
The best conversion I’ve ever seen was an old Crosley that had Bluetooth added. The owner was a huge old time radio program fan and when these shows were played through the old speaker it was amazing. He claimed it was because the programs were recorded in a format made to be played through that type of speaker.
UA-cam has not been the same without you Ray. Hope you are back to stay. Looking forward to the next spooky one too :)
All the best mate
Thanks, John. I get rather busy with work, hence the gaps between videos at times.
I added on to my wurlitzer wr18 jukebox. Left everything intact, just tied into the speakers. Works great, and looks original!! Love your video!!👍
Excellent!
Thanks Ray, module built and worked 1st time. Going to use that while I save to get my 1940s HMV restored. Sound is better than expected through the original speaker.
That’s good news, well done!
Hi Ray.
Just to let you know that I Really appriciate the videos of yours 🤗
Keep up your good work.
Thank you!
Best Regards,
Ole / OZ1OS
Oscar Zulu OneOscarSierra Thanks, Ole. Glad you enjoy them. Cheers, Ray.
I've done this to a Bush DAC90A radio. All the original stuff is still in place. Cut two wires, removed the original mains input connector and replaced it a 5V barrel connector. Two more wires to the speakers. Sounds great. Nothing else is changed, the original mains connector is zip-tied inside the case. It''s a mono bluetooth receiver running on a 5V supply. Some blue LEDs behind the valves, just for fun. It would take 10 mins to restore. Happy customer.
Sanwu 6W 5V mono
liquidsonly excellent!
Your rendition of a boombox cracked me up. Good to see you again. Thumbs up and shared.
Glad you enjoyed it. Cheers, Ray.
It's nice to meet you sir. Thanks for the advice!
Omg I love the old vintage radios! I would love to learn how to repair and how to modernize them 😁 you could start your own school of vintage radios technology!
I'm on it. Go here... www.radio-workshop.co.uk/membership-join/
Boy sure love Radio Jackie. Every Sunday Morning before going to the local pub.
Happy days!
I am so pleased to have found you! I am the proud owner of a Phénix M6 Nouveau 1950 and would love to have her working with The Bluetooth!
Tammy Page hi Tammy, I’ve answered the Facebook page message you sent me. Regards, Ray.
Love the old valve sets!
1 minute in, subscribed, Ray is awesome.
Great video
I sure hope you make the video and show us how to make the Bluetooth board for our vintage radio.
Thank you
Love all that retro test equipment. Never seen so many analog meters in one place. Nice to see it not only surviving but being used as designed.
rotaxtwin thanks!
@@g4nsj I have a 1940s radio that dont work and I want to use it for reenacting displays I'm young so would it be ok to get a small cheap speaker so it crackles like an old radio so I can play 1940s american swing music to make it sound original would that be ok
Edit I forgot to mention so I can play 1940s music thorough my phone
@@thIDthIRreenactor I don't see why not.
yeah i'd be interested in seeing how Ray's bluetooth rig is constructed.
Someone please make this Man an upgraded vintage swivel chair . It will complete the picture ; that &
maybe a bow tie.
Love this video
Haha!
Great video, I’m going to go looking for your follow up video on the actual wiring instruction now! Cheers from across the pond!
Excellent!
I enjoy your projects and seeing all your gear in the shack, reminds me of the good old days when I visited GWM Radio in Worthing, sadly long gone. I used to get most of my homebrew gear from the big fella who ran that shop. 73 Ralph G4PEY
I hate mixing vintage devices with new technologies, I think the sound of radios that have electronic tubes is exceptional, it's even a sacrilege to change them
Personally i absolutely am behind adding that.
You want young people to not completely disregard old tech?
Get them a chance to update it
I love videos like this Ray so thanks ! I used to absolutely love doing stuff like this and playing with Arduino etc. I wish you could have taught me all your skills 👍 Radio is special . It always felt like the broadcaster was speaking ONLY to me 😀
Hi Lee, glad you enjoyed the video. Hope all is well with you. Cheers for now, Ray.
@@g4nsj cheers Ray . Keep those podcasts coming too 😀🤝
I used the amp tube section and input a headphone level input into the preamp tube works great the radio sections had been parted out so that was not repairable.
Thanks for sharing your experiences, appreciate that you're more pragmatic than purist! Hope you make a video about the actual wiring of a bluetooth into an old tube radio.
I've written an eBook about fitting Bluetooth but I'll probably make a vdieo at some stage,. Cheers, Ray.
@@g4nsj Where can I find this e-book?
@@CorrodedRemnants it’s available here…. www.radio-workshop.co.uk/turn-a-vintage-radio-into-a-bluetooth-speaker-ebook/
Looking forward to part 2.
I have done something similar I had a Bush AC11 that has been recapped on advice and added an Amazon echo. The AC 11 had a gram input so I have added an in line amp and use the headphone Jack from the echo to listen through the old radio chassis and can't be happier
I agree with you, vintage technology is amazing. I want to learn your profession, indeed..
Thanks for showing off the BT on a card! Great ideas for keeping the old radios useful. 73, KB4QAA, bill
Pelican1984 thanks, Bill! 😃
This video is great, and I very much agree, also its taught me to never
mix the 2. many thanks, Colin.
A nice video Ray. I find myself collecting again after many years. Your ebook is very well written and I downloaded it for reference. I love these old sets.
Thanks!
I like the way Mend it a Mark does his Bluetooth addition to vintage equipment.
Cheers Ray thx for another post. Have a happy day!!
Thanks!
Thanks for another good one Ray. Cheers!
Thanks!
I did this conversion on an old stand up console radio I have. My main problem is... I have a Bluetooth receiver PCB with bass, treble and volume controls, but I want to fit those potentiometers into the spots where the original knobs were... But I can't figure out how to separate those pots from the pcb to fit the chassis.
(i did put three way vehicle speakers in my radio because the original old paper speaker was destroyed)
Separating the pots can be a nightmare. It’s not always possible.
I have a RediRad on the aerial of my 1959 Jaguar which I plug my phone into. It interrupts the signal coming from the aerial and converts the input from my mobile into a MW signal and plays through my 1950s Astor positive earth valve radio like any other station. If I switch the RediRad off, then the signal from normal stations comes through as normal. I also have a small home broadcast device that I plug my phone into and then tune my 1940s AWA radio into the station put out by the broadcast device. In both instances I can listen to whatever I want with literally no modification to the radios except on the antenna cable of the Jaguar.
Nicholas Scarff That’s excellent. A brilliant solution. Cheers, Ray.
There are bluetooth devices that can plug into the 12v socket in your car that transmit an FM frequency that you can tune your radio into just like any other channel. Similar to what you have but with fm instead and wireless.
I have an grundig radio ks 732 and looking to do the same but it all works and just want bluetooth as an add on.
You don't need to ruin the chassis
I'd love to see an instructional video on both radio and boombox conversion to bluetooth. I have a duel cassette boombox I want to convert, but want to leave all components but one cassette head intact. I want to retain original speakers, radio, and one cassette head functional, just use the second for bluetooth. Is this possible?
Everyone is different when it comes to collectibles. I've heard that some automobile restorers wants everything back to original even down to the correct lettering on the water hoses.
AT LAST!!! Someone explains why its so unusual to see a vintage radio thats been bluetoothed operated through the radios original on/off/volume potentiometer.
This has been driving me nuts. Ive got a handful of dead radios (i mean dead ... parts stolen out of them etc) that Id love to make into BT speakers but i wont do it because I think they should be operated by the original potentiometers.
No one has explained to me why thats so difficult but now you have, thank you.
Glad you found the video useful. 👍
@@g4nsj It was Ray ... but now youve created 5 or more new questions i have to get to the bottom off. Lol
Love this. Thank you for this video. I recently did one and it was surprisingly easy and I didn't have to tear apart anything. I can't believe people would actually go all the way up to destroy a vintage radio completely instead of just tapping into the circuit to introduce your audio signal. Such people shouldn't be alowed near historic equipment.
I’m glad it worked, well done. You’re right about such people, they should be banned from touching old radios! Cheers, Ray.
@@g4nsj Cheers from Bulgaria and keep up the good work, Ray!
For tube radios ,a lot of the old test ewuiptment works better,I would love to have a heath kit cap tester it shows things like leaks ,old signal tracer and tube testers,etc.,I love tube radios because of there sound
Have you information on the parts used and more information on the circuit..
Are you at all familiar with the Gemmy Halloween radios? They're based on vintage radios (the shell of it is anyway). The version I have doesn't have a Bluetooth function and I'm trying to find a video that would explain how to install one in it. I like the sound of the speaker it came with, but I want to be able to switch it back and forth between a Bluetooth function and the pre-loaded music it came with. Here's a video of one's insides to show you what I'm trying to do:
ua-cam.com/video/x1z6qzIgaQo/v-deo.html
Here's one more video of one just for reference:
ua-cam.com/video/Slx9RGvVqnw/v-deo.html
Hi Jay, sorry I’m not familiar with them. I’ll have a look round the internet and, if I discover anything, I’ll let you know. Sorry I can’t be more helpful.
I love the fact that you mention never destroy a piece of history!
I agree with you about gutting a vintage radio, I try to keep them as complete as possible. I do add Bluetooth to almost everyone I work on with one of those small boards by installing an out of the way transfer switch going to the signal line to the preamp tube with one side hooked up to the Bluetooth signal and the other to the original radio and you can switch between inputs. Voltages can be found to run the little BT boards or a power brick can be wired to the switched line in. It's amazing how great those valve amps and field coil speakers sound with a clean input. In one extreme case I even had to add a 6v6, power transformer and a new rectifier tube and speaker to an old set to convert it into a single ended amp but it sounded great even on the radio, I had to have a friend help me with that one but I used the existing holes and mountings without cutting anything. Just a few couple small holes for the transformer.
Great stuff. Fitting Bluetooth really does transform old radios. I like the 6V6 idea, well done.
Hi Ray, Great to see a fellow technician keen as ever. I upgrade 70s amps with BT modules, better amps etc, how about wireless streaming? Any thoughts on these as my next step?
Wireless streaming... hmm, that's not something I know a great deal about.
Thanks for the video. I have an old radio I wanted to equip with Bluetooth since I'll probably never fix it but I didn't really destroy anything so this video helped. Could you please add a more technical description or links of the components so I would know what to get to fix this in my own? Thanks!
I'm firmly against fitting modern guts into old radios, but this is a great video that may reduce the amount of people completely destroying their radios, well done again Ray!
Thanks, Arlen. It's nice to hear from you. Cheers, Ray.
I was having a conversation with Steve Harris about this recently, on eBay there are a lot of DAC90A's with bluetooth capabilities and then when you scroll down to see the sellers other items, they have the chassis that came out of the same radio. If I'm going to add an aux input to a radio, either bluetooth or standard 3.5mm, I usually capacitively couple it onto the volume control and use the original amp, it's not safe but it works.
Arlen Moulton I’ve seen the radios on eBay but I didn’t realise that they removed the chassis. That’s not good at all!
It does raise the question of how the scale glass and unused control knobs are held in place.
Arlen Moulton good point.
I want the look of an old vintage radio with the nts nts nts stereo sound of modernity! What do I do?
Ray I have a similar set up and am going to hook up the bluetooth to an aux input to see if the larger amp in the radio will pick up and amplify the signal. If so then we also can do up a boombox and with a rechargeable battery get all the original power. I have nothing to loose.
Brilliant idea!
Hi Ray, I get your point about not installing BT into a working radio but an option I have been thinking about recently is - as you are aware, a lot of vintage radios have a phono input for a record player so the bluetooth board or dongle could be installed into the phono input of a working radio - safe and easily removed, no need for a SS amp and you have a fully working radio with BT option at a flick of a switch!
Regards - Kevin GW4WOV
Hi Kevin, Yes, good idea if its a working radio. Be careful of live chassis radios, though. Cheers, Ray.
Kevin Williams
Perhaps an issue to match the impedance between BT and Phono input?
Don’t no, just a guess...😉
Thanks your idea!
Are there live chassis radios with phono inputs? If there are wouldn't they isolate the phono input in some way? Otherwise that would be rather dangerous if you did plug in a pickup arm for your gramaphone!
They are isolated with capacitors. Still not safe in my opinion.
Yeah, I had an old radio like that, I don't think I would chance it if it were old though. The phono connections (yes there were two) were mounted to the back board and not anywhere near the chassis, but if I still had the radio would I plug anything into the phono plugs that ran on transistors? I think not, not without checking it out thoroughly first and then it might be a mismatch and have some strange results.
How do you install Bluetooth in 1920s or 1930s radio we’re not stripping it we’re leaving the speaker alone
I agree. I have a hidden lead to pull out and plug in a Bluetooth when i want yet still use as an original valve radio.
The other way of doing is build a low power transmitter.
If someone has taken an axe to one then i would put a small mono unit inside .
Should add on the 2 radios i have put a lead on i have an isolation transformer installed in the Bluetooth receiver . The lead can easily be removed .
I have a watch from 1890 original and not working im leaving as is and not getting restored.
I agree. You’ve made some good points.
Good advice there, Ray. Leaving the internals intact would at least make the radio more attractive should you ever want to sell it. Also, I too love the older stuff, the latest aquisition being a Solartron dual power supply from about '64 Germanium and hugely over engineered......lovely jubbly!!! Great video.
Thanks, Steve. OK on the Solartron dual power supply. Excellent!
Great as as always 👌
Thanks!
Hello. New to Bluetooth. Just a couple of questions. What would you do with a set fitted with a mains energised speaker? I have a 1952 Buick car fitted with a Zenith car radio. The car is 6 volt DC. What advice can you give me please.?
Many thanks Nick Jervis
Hi Nick,
You'll have to fit a permanent magnet speaker. I'm not sure about running the unit from 6 Volts.
What components are everyone using to outfit their old classic radios with bluetooth? Do you buy kits, or piece a few different parts together?
I think people buy the parts separately.
Hi Ray, this video is of extra interest to me. I am not that familiar with Bluetooth and so far, I have never used it with anything, including my mobile phone, which just so happens to be an older model. So, thanks for sharing this video. All the best. Robert.
RGC198 thanks, Robert. Glad you found it useful.
Great video. I have an old Pye P75A valve radio which I would like to convert to a bluetooth receiver leaving all the original parts. Have you made a video yet Ray showing the making of your bluetooth board or have the instructions somewhere on the net. If not can you recommend or point me to a video or instructions already available as there is a lot of confusing rubbish out there. Thanks from another Ray
Where can I find these parts? Do you have a wiring diagram?
I sell an eBook with all info here... www.radio-workshop.co.uk/turn-a-vintage-radio-into-a-bluetooth-speaker-ebook/
Good video. Interesting about the volume control. I didn't have a problem using the originals but maybe because the 3 radios I've modified I'm going into the low side of the volume and using the original valve amp driving the original speakers. I like to play the period correct music on them and they sounds authentic.. but without AM hum and static as reception is terrible in my area. I like the radios to appear untouched only showing a tiny switch in the back.
It's nice to use the original valve amp if possible. Cheers, Ray.
I love your shop. But how about a low power am modulated bluetooth out put wired via a free standing if transformer to antenna.
Good thought!
Try this... www.radio-workshop.co.uk/turn-a-vintage-radio-into-a-bluetooth-speaker-ebook/
I have no problem even adding it to a vintage radio, if it were mine and I am keeping it I have no problem adding new technology to it, However, if you have a good looking scrapper and it is beyond repair, why not give it a new use, no point of just throwing it out.
I think you should make the video of how you do this Ray, it might just save a few cabinets going to the tip.
If nothing else it will give people the incentive to get involved in electronics, even if they just build it into a box or old stereo.
However, I like the tone of some of the older stuff, much better than the tin bottom of the bucket sound you get from some of the new stuff. I hate it when someone turns on a radio and it sound a treble and the speaker is made like it is bolted to the bottom of a Fireman's bucket!
YES, do the video and list the parts, though don't list the supplier as they shove up the price!
Nice one Ray.
bob4jjjj I’m writing some instructions, with pics, explaining how to put it all together. Watch this space.
Excellent.
I have a vintage radio that requires an external earth and a long wire antenna. This doesn't suit my home. A Bluetooth module would let me use it. Also, I have not powered it up for10 years or so. Go full 220V or start lower to recommission it?
Definitely start lower and see how it goes.
Great Idea Ray have a few non working valve radio that this would be a great fix until someone wants to repair/restore in the future.
At least they will be of some use rather than struck in the attic gathering dust.
Thanks for your video. I have a Philips Bi-Ampli valve radio. It is stereo and sounds amazing. I would like to add bluetooth or even a cable with a minijack that comes out to connect and ipad or such. It has a phono in chanel. I tried to hook up a simple stereo cable to that input, but that didn't work well. If such a connection would be possible anything with an audio output could be conected and amplified through those marvelous valve amps. Do you have any ideas how? Thanks, Eric
Eric Lagerström hi Eric, it should work. Perhaps you need a preamp?
@@g4nsj This is the front of the one I have photos.app.goo.gl/WLqzECCDbwG5gH1T8
And the back photos.app.goo.gl/Eo7UEtwzF7JX1TzS7
So two inputs. One for a tapeplayer and one for a recordplayer. Amazing radio. Do you think those inputs might require different power than a mp3 player provides?
Great vid.
I am so happy I found your Channel! I have been disappointed in watching people tear their radios apart to place a piece of crap inside & call it "Bluetooth upgrade in vintage radio!" ...Really???
Just keep the thing Vintage, try to make it pristine & add Bluetooth as discreetly as possible! 👍
Ronnie Pirtle Jr thanks!
Thank You for this video. I have a vintage radio. It works very well.
Problem I love to listen to old time radio shows. I have my collection on my iPhone.
I would like to build a Bluetooth setup like you have.
What I would like to do is get power from the input side of the transfer.
I can regulate the volume with my iPhone. I would like to place a small volume control thru the air hole in the back. I would like to control it with a small screw driver.
Put a small power switch thru and air vent hole.
To have an led light that I can place next to the tuning light. To simulate the radio running.
Can I piggy back onto the existing speaker?
I would only use the radio or the Bluetooth. Not both at the same time. Except for the volume control and power switch in the back. My grandchildren will think I am receiving the radio shows over the air.
I know you can do anything. Is this practical?
Can you suggest the parts that I would need. Of course I won’t sue you if it doesn’t work.
Thank You in advance.
Did you do a video to build the Bluetooth board?
Jeffrey Low not to build it, no.
Hello Ray it's David from Italy, thank you for making this video! I've just subscribed! I did one speaker project but it's catching a lot of that fax noise.. can you show a diagram of the connection for the converter you talk about at 7:18?
Thanks you!
Hi David, you should be able to look up the date for the connections from here...
www.ebay.co.uk/itm/222523235755?ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1423.l2648
Yes
Wonderful !!
Thanks!
Does these Bluetooth modules play a "device connected" message, once connected?
Patrick O'Reilly no, they just beep once connected.
Depends on the module, some make no noise at all
Dare I say dogmatic extremes of opinion or action are rarely productive.
In this case: Is your radio entirely knackered? Then do whatever you fancy in whatever way you like. Have you got a perfect and working radio? Maybe modifying it is not such a good plan, although are sympathetic and reversible additions that bad? ...and of course all destinations between.
Hi Ray.
Great to see another video from you.Hope to catch up on air one day.I will be up at Beachy Head at about 2pm this afternoon monitoring 145.500Mhz if you were free?
73.Ian.G7HFS.
Ian Harling hi Ian, I don’t gave much of an aerial for two metres but I’ll try.
Brillant , would like to see a video how to build that board, I haven't any valve radios beyond repair but plenty cheaply avaiable on eBay , next project for me ......
Hi Shaun, I'll give the next video some thought. It may take a while but I'll work on it. Cheers, Ray.
Hi Ray. I can understand stripping a chassis if you wanted to make it a tube amp but I agree,there's no sense in stripping it just to add some solid state stuff to it. The purists always freak out over modifying/repurposing antique stuff but the way I see it,it's alot better than a beautiful old piece going in the landfill. Most average people nowadays will never listen to a true vintage radio anyways.....the caps wear out,they require retuning every once in a while and most are too impatient for the tubes.....ahem,sorry....valves to heat up.
mentalvmaxrider thanks!
Where do I get the Bluetooth gadget from?
Ebay I think is the only place.
Thank God! I had the thought recently to add a wireless bluetooth module to a 40's era Zenith Radio and sat down to draw out a circuit for it and thought, ah, I should check UA-cam, I'm sure that it's been done. To my HORROR, I found nothing but videos of people ripping out the guts and using the case to house a crappy bluetooth based amplifier. Holy hell, I couldn't believe it, lol. I would never do it, and if I did, I damned sure wouldn't create evidence of the crime. You have restored my faith in humanity. Thank you.
Thanks for the video. I agree with you, do not destroy our historic things, work with them. I am very new to this subject. I am thinking of a modernising a vintage radio to play 30s and 40s music from websites directly and maybe play old recordings in mp3 format by artist. This would give it an authentic feel. I would like it to play music and choose stations from websites wirelessly directly, not just Bluetooth through my phone or tablet. Is this possible at all? I gather there is a way with a couple of modules that I can fit together myself. I’ve seen video’s but as a newbie not understood the programming of pi or arduino. Is there any cheap pre programmed modules out there?
Regards
Hi, I don’t know about pre-programmed modules. It’s not something I’ve dealt with. Sorry about that. I think you’ll have to keep searching the Internet for someone who specialises in that sort of thing.
Another great video Ray - thank you!
Would you ever spin the camera around so we can see your ham gear?
Some videos about amateur radio (technical or like your pirate ones) would be really great!
73,
Matt
M0PTO
Hi Matt, My ham gear isn't in the workshop anymore. I'll make a video showing the gear when I get a minute. Cheers, Ray.
Mike Sienicki Haha - I've heard that a few times, but more popular in the UK seems to be people coming back with M0-Please Turn Over! 73
Hi I'm Michael from Norwich, hi ,I love your views as I am not at entry level! Quit far from it .
I want vintage to be vintage .
I would love some advice on celiniam rectifiers ect and mullard valves and to be honest i have 3early stuff, pye ect plus others.
Please were can I start to revive these awesome pieces of history
Hi Michael, it's a long process learning how to repair and restore vintage valve radios. There are books on ebay and other places so you might start by looking there.
Thanks for your video, I’d love for my old grans 1960 Murphy radio to be used again, with WiFi and Bluetooth. Would you be interested?
I’m afraid I can’t help as I retired a couple of years ago. Sorry about that. However, you could try this chap…. dabhandradio.com/
I want Phillips Holland redio do you have this redio than plz reply me I am searching this redio from so long time
Sorry, I don’t have radios for sale.
@@g4nsj please sir I am requesting you only one redio sir plzz
I don’t have any radios. I have retired, I don’t work any more. All my radios have gone.
@@g4nsj ok sir than... I thought you have this redio so that's why I asked you.. I am searching this redio from so long time if know any one who have this redio than plz inform me
OK.
i have a pye fen man 2 box may be a 50watt boom box ???? what a hoot that would be ..jeff
Are you in the Shoreham area?
Tim H I’m in Worthing.
Are you sure you thought this out properly? Let the 50L6 and 35Z5 tubes cook the bluetooth board? That doesn't seem like a good way to go. Why not keep the original speaker being powered by the radio's audio output tube? My choice would be to mount a bluetooth module on the back side of the radio where the air is cooler. You can mount the bluetooth inside of a little snap close plastic box, the bottom side glued or screwed to the radio's back cover. Add a double pole toggle switch to switch the bluetooth audio into the radio when not using the radio to listen to radio stations. The other pole of the switch turns off the bluetooth when listening to radio stations to prevent digital noise ingress. The voltage to power the bluetooth can be derived from the cathode of the audio output tube (50L6 or whatever) through a 5 volt regulator chip.
The tubes aren’t in use. A separate solid state amp is used.
ripping an old radio apart is like the mash patotoe adverts in the 70,
THEY PEAL THEM WITH THERE METAL KNIVES
THEY BOIL THEM FOR 20 MINUITS
THEN MASH THEM ALL TO BITS HA HA HA
tnx jeffrey
As time goes by,parts for vintage radios are getting harder to find. Eventually the only way to repair a radio will be to upgrade components.
Indeed.
Couldn't agree more Ray, non evasive treat all the way ! I just cringe at some of the online destructibles. CHEERS!
Thanks!
they probably strip them down because the don't understand the existing circuitry.
In ten years time, who is going to care? I'm into railway preservation, and old cars, we cannot save them all.
Indeed.
That's Fun Doing That I Love Using
Bluetooth Cause There's Nothing
Good On The Radio Anyhow. & Besides
I Don't Listen To All That Rap Music.
I'm A Country Guy. But I Like Nice
Sounding JBL Or Jenson
Or Bose Speakers For A Nice Crisp
& Robust Sound That You'r Ears
Will Be Happy With.
Good video. You and I have much in common except I started as a TV engineer in the 1950's. I can talk 405 line and Ally Pally, valves & Take it From Here. Projection TV and Ferranti. Ion traps and ion burns. Line scan and frame collapse and EY51's and Turret tuners. I'm the real deal me!
I understand and agree with everything you say except when we get to BT - Then I'm flaky . So (and I have gotta do this by July!) what power does the BT need? Would it be 5V? What battery? Would a PP3 do it (9V). My project is a 1950's portable valve Ever Ready Sky Baby radio with DL91 valve range. They are all low emission but do work if filament boosted 20% but lack sensitivity and audio drive. I doubt the wisdom of even trying as the LT battery won't last long will it? I can (have) made up the 90V with PP3's. My customer (lives next door) wants it as a retro for 1950's event in July (Probably Goodwood Revival). She's seen your video dammit! Bluetooth is her preferred solution. She ain't precious about old electronics.
The speaker in it is probably 16 ohms and I would need to disconnect it from the valve output transformer I suppose. It would probably serve and then the radio isn't destroyed from it original spec too much. Well you never know when Mullards might recommence production of those dear little, always useless, valves! :
Hi Berry, nice to hear from, you. BT doesn't need an aerial. It transmits and receives on 2.4GHz. Power isolation keeps out BT noise. Don't know ab pout cross-talk. I think the ebay boards are fine. Sorry I can't be of more help. I know this one is good... www.ebay.co.uk/itm/152869723710?var=452619542196&ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1423.l2649
Cheers, Ray.
Excellent advice Ray , I'm definitely of the " add a few parts for Bluetooth and keep the original design working as well as long as it's safe " school , preserving the original electronics as I want to hear historical equipment. However there are many instances when the " guts " are not worth saving or are an unsafe state of repair . Someone may want to populate a nice looking item with a set up similar to your design too.
Thanks., it's nice to hear from you.
m.ua-cam.com/video/1QBKCL4EOps/v-deo.html
Nice to hear from you too Ray.
I waited ten years to get the right " cheap part " to fix this strictly non vintage Pure DAB radio !.
Having the Bluetooth feeding into a valve amp surly that’s what most people what these days the valve sound.
Wash Board I wish they did want that. Sadly, the majority don’t seem to care.
yes please do !
I don’t like to see vintage radios, phonos, recorders, etc destroyed and converted to amps or blue tooth systems. They are too hard to come by.