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-   -   My new old tubed Zenith..am/fm (http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=22941)

WhiteSE 08-14-2004 01:44 PM

My new old tubed Zenith..am/fm
 
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incredible sound...

maxm 08-14-2004 02:14 PM

Yeah, Those Zenith AM/FM radios are some of the best out there in terms of sound and quality, always point to point wiring and a metal chassis. They made the same basic chassis from the early 50s to the end of tubes. With the addition of an AFC for the FM in the mid 50s. I have one of the earlier ones from the 50s, my first old radio, had it for years and it works great, I use it almost every day. I'm still amazed at how good the tuning and sound is on it. I believe many of these sets had two electrostatic tweeters to compliment the huge main speaker.

Enjoy!

WhiteSE 08-15-2004 12:11 AM

I still am having truoble downsizing pics for posting...mine does have the AFC....
mine is the X338 model...

WhiteSE 08-15-2004 12:39 AM

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radio insides

WhiteSE 08-15-2004 12:43 AM

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better pic

WhiteSE 08-15-2004 01:00 AM

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label

jt1stcav 08-15-2004 09:14 PM

Gotta love those tube AM/FM Zenith radios...
 
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;)

Tom Bavis 08-16-2004 07:30 AM

Found the X338 in the Sams Photofact index, #725, which would be 1964. I don't have any Sams that new...

Telecolor 3007 08-22-2004 04:56 PM

Why the U.S.A. radios had only AM (MW) and FM, and not LW and SW too? The European radios had LW-MW-SW-FM.

Tom Bavis 08-22-2004 07:21 PM

By the 1950s, shortwave had pretty much disappeared from consumer radios in the US. It WAS popular in the '30s and '40s. Longwave was never used for broadcasting here - only aiport code beacons can be heard there.

WhiteSE 08-22-2004 07:51 PM

I went to an antique flea market, and had to be restrained by my GF as they had like 5 great tube radios, including a Transoceanic.....

Telecolor 3007 08-24-2004 04:42 AM

In Romania (especially durring the Comunism regim) we used to listen foregin radios on SW. No with the FM and the internet...

Jeffhs 08-27-2004 02:54 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by maxm
Yeah, Those Zenith AM/FM radios are some of the best out there in terms of sound and quality, always point to point wiring and a metal chassis. They made the same basic chassis from the early 50s to the end of tubes. With the addition of an AFC for the FM in the mid 50s. I have one of the earlier ones from the 50s, my first old radio, had it for years and it works great, I use it almost every day. I'm still amazed at how good the tuning and sound is on it. I believe many of these sets had two electrostatic tweeters to compliment the huge main speaker.

Enjoy!

Max, your set and the K-731 were among Zenith's best AM/FM tube radios in the late '50s-early '60s. My '731, an ebay score last spring, in many ways sounds and works better than my Aiwa bookshelf stereo. The '731 has a 5x7 oval speaker for lows and an electrostatic tweeter, connected directly to the plate of the 35C5 audio output tube (this is the first radio with an electrostatic tweeter I've seen in four decades of electronics experimenting).

I like the hand-wiring and all-metal chassis of Zenith's early (until the '80s) radios and TVs as well. I had a 12-inch Zenith solid-state b&w portable TV in the late '70s (bought new in 1978) that lasted 22 years. It was still working when I got rid of it four years ago (no room for it in the apartment I moved to a year earlier, and it didn't work well on its monopole VHF antenna as I live in a fringe area for Cleveland television). This TV, ironically, had one large circuit board which contained the entire set, including, IIRC, the flyback, but I had absolutely no trouble with it in all the years I had it. The only thing wrong with it when I finally gave it up was the detent on the UHF tuner broke or jammed, locking the tuner on one channel (as bad luck would have it, the thing wound up on a blank channel in our area, but it didn't bother me at the time; the CBS station in Cleveland didn't switch to a UHF channel until years later, I wasn't watching PBS much in those days, and the one [at that time] independent UHF station in Cleveland didn't have much to watch back then either [years before there were any such networks as UPN, The WB, etc.]).

I saw a 1982-vintage Zenith hi-fi radio on ebay last night, solid state, wood cabinet, tuning meter, the whole nine yards. The seller described this one as one of the last radios Zenith ever had manufactured to its own specifications, although the radio had been built offshore (their radio/audio division was already based in Korea by the '80s; I once owned a Zenith integrated stereo system of late '70s-early '80s vintage which had been made there). By this time Zenith had stopped using its famous lightning-bolt Z and the crest emblem on its TVs and audio gear, but the lightning bolt resurfaced for a short time on GoldStar-built Zenith-branded television sets (though I understand it was dropped again not long ago, this time probably, even likely, for good).

kc8adu 08-27-2004 08:31 PM

i have the same model exept the neighbors kids doodled all over the front with permanent markers before they set it on the curb.
all it needed was a couple of filter caps and it sounds better than the bpc they are using.
guess i will tear it down and paint the grille with some bright yellow imron i have here.
at least they didnt mess up the dial scale.

Jeffhs 08-28-2004 12:30 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by kc8adu
i have the same model exept the neighbors kids doodled all over the front with permanent markers before they set it on the curb.
all it needed was a couple of filter caps and it sounds better than the bpc they are using.
at least they didnt mess up the dial scale.

Ouch! That's a shame that those kids had to mark up the front panel of your set as they did. I just saw a pic of one of those radios attached to another post, and it looks very nice with its white front, black and white vertical sliderule dial and all. To deface a radio this nice looking is, IMO, outrageous. This sort of destruction is almost like the guff some kids pull on trash day when they throw rocks at the screen of a TV set on the curb (I've seen sets damaged this way--it's a wonder the kids who pull this aren't hurt badly), or knock the neck off a CRT of a set with the neck exposed (no back cover). The only thing worse than that, again IMO, is for thoughtless kids to take a screwdriver or other sharp instrument and permanently gouge or scratch a nice-looking walnut, cherry or other fine wood cabinet (or punch holes in the speaker grille cloth, often damaging or destroying the speaker when the cone gets punched through). Again, I have seen console TVs and stereos with cabinets disfigured like this, and it makes me cringe every time I see such a thing. I like the warm look of wood furniture; just the thought of such deliberate destruction of, say, a well-made 1950s or earlier vintage Early American walnut radio or TV cabinet makes my heart sink.

Glad to hear, however, that you only had to replace the filters to get your set working again. The radio will probably play for years now; after all, those older Zeniths were made to last. I'd keep a set of replacement tubes around just in case. It's much easier to replace a bad tube than a defective filter cap.

BTW, I can only hope that the kids who marked up the front of that radio did not also do the same thing to the wood cabinet. The C845s, as well as many of Zenith's better table radios of the '50s and early sixties, had very nice walnut or blonde wood cabinets; if marked on with (especially) a permanent marker, the finish, of course, is as permanently disfigured as if the cabinet had been deeply scratched.



Kind regards,


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