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Show us your radios!

The Reno Kid

A-List Customer
Messages
362
Location
Over there...
This is my favorite among the radios in my collection:

ecc965a1.jpg

1936 Fairbanks-Morse

For some reason, I tend to gravitate toward Fairbanks-Morse and Silvertone. I'm not sure why.
 

Cousin Hepcat

Practically Family
Messages
774
Location
NC
CharlieH. said:
Say, seeing those phonos makes me wonder... would you trust your 78's to an automatic player?
Here's a great site with all the info you need to decide which changers you should or shouldn't trust different records to. Slicer changers are the most common kind from before & during WWII, but are some of the deadliest when either the slicers are bent even just a little, or when you play them with Post-WWII 78's where the record edges are angular rather than smooth rounded. In either case, the slicers catch on the edges, and CRUNCH! lol

http://geocities.com/midimagic@sbcglobal.net/changers.htm

Then there were the earlier "throwoff" changers: when a record was done, an arm would throw the record off into a carpeted box... :rolleyes:

slidechg.jpg


That was WAY more than anyone wanted to hear...

[edit] oh yeah one of mine... a fave: a cherry Montgomery Wards console.

temp_rp10.jpg


- C H
 

Sweet Leilani

A-List Customer
Messages
305
Location
Quakertown, PA
Here are a couple more- I think this is all of them, now:

The 1959 Motorola R/P- just needs the amp rebuilt and she'll be good to go- I can't wait to hear how it sounds!
100_1948.jpg


A 50s Westinghouse clock radio:
100_1950.jpg


A 30s Detrola:
100_1623.jpg
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
My Zenith

Ahhhh . . . . I'll never understand this technical stuff. For some reason the image I tacked up of my radio has gone to pixel heaven If you look at my MYSPACE PAGE (woohoo!!!) you'll see it. That is, if my profile updated properly. I'll never understand this . . . but I repeat myself.
I love my Zenith. And my Philco.
 

Earp

One of the Regulars
Messages
135
Location
West Michigan, USA


Here is my Kolster K-122 from about 1932. I have some restoration work left to do on the front. I need to spray some darker toner on the carvings and side edges, and on the fancy bookmatched veneer. That striped grain should be more subtle. My brother (retired electrical genius turned computer software genius) helped me with overhauling the tube chassis. It works beautifully and sounds as clear and fine as the day it was sold over 75 years ago.

kolster.jpg


I use an AM transmitter that I built to broadcast golden era radio programs and music to it. I can't tell you how satisfying it is to hear those vintage sounds coming out of it as I watch the little dial glow. Sometimes I get lost in another time.

 

CharlieH.

One Too Many
Messages
1,169
Location
It used to be Detroit....
Earp said:


I use an AM transmitter that I built to broadcast golden era radio programs and music to it. I can't tell you how satisfying it is to hear those vintage sounds coming out of it as I watch the little dial glow. Sometimes I get lost in another time.


What sort of transmitter do you use? I've been itching to pipe some shows into the ole philco for a long time, but nothing does it.
 

ScionPI2005

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,335
Location
Seattle, Washington
Sweet Leilani said:
Here are most of mine:

100_1618.jpg

1937 Zenith chairside

100_1626.jpg

1946 GE

100_1621.jpg

1946 RCA

100_1433.jpg

1958 Zenith clock radio

100_1456.jpg

1946 RCA radio/phono

I'll try to take pictures of the rest ASAP, including our latest project, a 1959 Motorola console R/P.

Very nice collection. Aside from the radios, the fan in the second picture got my attention too. Do you know what model that is?
 

ScionPI2005

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,335
Location
Seattle, Washington
My radio

Well, I know this picture has been slightly floating around, but I guess I shall post it here as well. This was my grandfather's Zenith CobraMatic. I got it restored about one and a half years ago and it works great. The record cabinet its sitting on is actually another phonograph cabinet (for a 78 player) that was never installed. My mother refurbished it, and it looks great as a furniture piece.

cobraopen2.jpg
 

panamag8or

Practically Family
Messages
859
Location
Florida
I'm so jealous. Considering I worked in radio, I don't have any good vintage ones. I do have an old RCA mic, like the ones that Letterman and Larry King have on their desks, but that's all.:(
 

Django

New in Town
Messages
27
Location
Chicago
On old thread, but what the heck.

Here's my Philco. My grandparents bought it in '35 or '36. They lived on a farm with no electricity in those days, so it was battery powered. Unfortunately my uncles took it apart in the 50's and the chassis probably got tossed. Can't find it anywhere. My grandma gave it to me in the early 90's. I stripped it and refinished it but it was one of my first pieces so it was just ok. I've learned alot in the last 18 years, so I decided to freshen it up a bit with new cloth and some knobs and a new shellac finish. I'm on the hunt for a chassis to put in it, but no luck yet.

philco4.jpg


philco1.jpg


I also have a working Silvertone tombstone radio. I don't have any pics of it and it is tucked away in storage at the moment. I have a WWII radio as well, and it works. I was never 100% sure it was WWII, because it is SO NICE. It's perfect. But then I was watching a show about some vets going back to Iwo Jima and in some of the vintage footage, there was my radio! I'll get some pics.

Picked up this pile for $15. It's a Coronado. It needs some veneer work and the chassis needs gone through. Who knows when I'll get to it, if ever, but for $15? Hell, I spend that on lunch some days! :) Needless to say, my wife was less than thrilled! Hahaha! :D

coronado.jpg
 

RetroToday

A-List Customer
Messages
466
Location
Toronto, Canada
Great radios here, I hadn't seen this old thread before now.

I sold a few off to make room so I currently have about 25 tube radios ranging from the 1920s to the 1950s, but this is one of the better ones, and one of my favourites. It's a 1937 McMurdo Silver "Masterpiece VI" console radio with a "Clifton" cabinet. In working condition, but it's in need of some servicing so I don't play it.

21 vacuum tubes make it a great performer, it can pick up just about every frequency available at the time - regular AM broadcast bands, AM apex band, Police Band and Shortwave.

You can see the other radios in my collection through the link in my signature, below.

3681127068_b1cebb1205.jpg

With chrome dust shield on.

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With chrome dust shield off.
 

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