My 1963 Grundig Fleetwood Model 92 CA Tube Radio
Pics of my 1963 Grundig Fleetwood Model 92 CA Tube Radio.
This is an AM / FM radio made in West Germany 1963. I found it at a garage sale for $2.00 1 Owner Works Good. https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2915/...43cc99e9_b.jpg https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3881/...56220b7d_b.jpg https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2907/...89a0651d_b.jpg https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3885/...5111df12_b.jpg https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3840/...6c0f0f39_b.jpg https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5507/...e1512933_b.jpg https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2906/...22b2532c_b.jpg https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3890/...5fa33a9e_b.jpg https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3867/...48cb87a8_b.jpg https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2905/...51ea80bf_b.jpg |
Interesting that the AM BC band goes down to 510KHz.
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Is the "PU" band "Public Utility"? what range does it cover? Interesting radio!
jr AH! I just saw a phono jack on the back... "PU" = "Phono" ? |
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:D |
PU = pickup, i.e. Phono pickup
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You just answered a question that I had forgot about! My parents had a radio very similar to yours, but it had short wave bands. I always wondered what PU was for. Pick up, simple enough! HMMMM Now I know 40+ years later! FM never did work very good on it though.
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An RCA type phono jack, single voltage transformer primary and the N/A FM band. It looks like they left the AM band as-is, plus no LW. :scratch2: |
In the mid-'70s, I had a Grundig model 2168 table model radio with AM, FM and shortwave. It worked quite well on all bands, and the sound was excellent, even though it had only one speaker (the other two were missing). I used it mainly as an amplifier for an old Webcor tape deck. The FM worked well enough in my area (I lived in a Cleveland suburb at the time, some 30 miles from the stations' transmitters), but the tuner in this radio only covered from about 88 to 106 MHz. (Where I live today, this radio may not have worked well at all on FM without an external antenna, since this area is even further from the stations than the suburb where I grew up.)
I understand many of these German all-band radios had FM from 88 to 104 MHz or so, but since mine went to at least 106 it may well have been an export model. I don't know what the actual FM tuning range was, since the dial glass was missing when I got the set. I replaced the missing dial scale with a piece of wood the width of the radio's cabinet, and used two knobs from the junk box on the volume and tuning control shafts (when I got this radio it was in pieces, and a lot of parts, such as the dial glass I mentioned above, were missing so I had to improvise). I left the tuning indicator tube, an EL84 if memory serves, flopping around loose in the cabinet, although I was able to stand it upright on the leads to the socket. Not the right way to do it, I know, but it worked, so I didn't worry about looks. The FM finally quit a couple of years later, after I got a new Zenith stereo system, so I junked the Grundig and forgot about it. Thinking about it now, though, I think perhaps the only problem with the set may have been that the RF amplifier tube may have been weak or even dead; however, since I had the new stereo system by now, I had no further use for the Grundig radio, although it sat in my basement for some time before I junked it for good. |
A lot of the German radio's, that were built for use in Europe, only tuned from 86 to 100 MHZ.
One of my neighbors, had a small "Nora" branded radio that didn't tune past 100MHZ. She listened to an Easy listening station at 102.1. I tweaked the oscillator slug to shift the range and it would only tune that high. I also told her that the dial would be off and it would lose the lower frequencies. :scratch2: |
What is 'VOICE' used for ?
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RCA used to refer to it as speech! |
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