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-   -   A new Emerson roundie (http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=6100)

Kamakiri 04-13-2003 03:14 PM

A new Emerson roundie
 
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Just picked this sad specimen up from my ad in the local paper. $30, and I had to lug it down a long flight of fire escape-type stairs. Thank God they weren't as steep :eek: . Difficult nonetheless, when you're doing it by yourself.

Lady was about 80 years old and lived above a liquor store. Someday this might be a good looking set. She was firm on $60 until I told her I was probably the only person in Western New York to offer her anything for it. I came up $10 from my offering price.

No UHF on this model.

http://i44.photobucket.com/albums/f9...ps3uluoy3q.jpg

Kamakiri 04-13-2003 03:15 PM

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Cool closeup of the Emerson color logo


http://i44.photobucket.com/albums/f9...psydsldegj.jpg

Kamakiri 04-13-2003 03:17 PM

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And now, the guts.....

Set had no back on it and no tubes, pretty dingy in there. Any hints as to what chassis this might be or age on this old girl?

http://i44.photobucket.com/albums/f9...ps0n8ladbu.jpg

Eric H 04-13-2003 04:32 PM

Bummer, missing the Chord and all the Tubs :D

Looks like the safety glass is about ready to fall off though!

Have you checked the CRT yet?
I'd guess somewhere between 61 and 63 on the year.

rcaman 04-13-2003 04:33 PM

chassis
 
sure i know. a dusty one without any tubes. i would have lugged it down stairs also. maby it will be a good fixeruper. and may the crt have good emission steve

grumpy 04-13-2003 05:25 PM

I would have charged her 20 bucks to carry it away !:eek:

Tony V 04-13-2003 07:27 PM

Kam...
It looks like you might have a RCA CTC12 chassis there. We've seen and have had worse here on the "before" postings. I cant wait to see what it looks like after. So far i havent had any responses to my ad but i'm going to keep trying. I know theres got to be more "roundies" here in my neck of the woods. Good luck on your project!
Tony

Rob 04-13-2003 07:37 PM

Wow Tim,

You must really be desperate. Not many Emersons around though. That will be a nice looker because it has a good cabinet and front but it will take a LOT of work, plus you really don't want to run one of these color sets without a back for safety reasons.

I have identified the chassis as #120699, 722 in my RCA color TV Service Manual. That chassis was used in the RCA CTC-15 sets. I don't know what year it is. I'd guess 1963.

Have you put the CRT tester on it yet?

You did really good on the first score last week IMO.

Rob

Carmine 04-13-2003 08:19 PM

I've used that same line myself..."I'm probably the only guy who'll give you anything for it."

Now, this set brings to mind something I've been wondering about. How many manufactuers actually made their "own" color sets? Obviously RCA, Zenith, Motorola. In other words, if I were to find one of every color set offered, in say 1964, how many unique chassis would I find?

Steve Hoffman 04-13-2003 11:56 PM

That's a great question.

Since all the on line "History Of Color TV" websites seem to stop at 1959 or 1960 at the latest, and pick up again with the Sony sets of the 1970's, your guess is as good as mine. The 1960-66 period in Color TV development is the most interesting to me and the least interesting to TV historians I guess.

Kamakiri 05-18-2003 05:58 PM

The CRT is made by Emerson, and tests great! And, thanks to my trusty heat gun, I successfully performed cataract removal surgery on it, and we'll start making her go again after a long sleep.......if my skills are up to it!

Rob 05-18-2003 11:49 PM

Hey Tim,

Way to go on the cataract surgery! Were ya' scared? I gotta try this when I get the nerve.

You will have to put the safety glass back on to use the tube. I supported the CRT face up and using 3 popsickle stick segments inserted a half inch at 120 degree intervals to create an air space to the cover plate ran an bead of clear RTV silicone around the gap. The next day I pulled the wood spacers and filled the holes left with RTV as well. No way dust or silicone grease can creep into the gap like it could with the old rubber gasket used with the 21FBP22 setup and make a mess in the picture area. Make sure your inside glass surfaces are scrupulously cleaned.

Rob

opt80 05-19-2003 07:07 AM

Tim,I gotta ask,you know I do! After The Cataract surgery did you
implant an I.O.L.(Inter-ocular Lens)?

I guess basically you will do that.

Alan

Chad Hauris 05-19-2003 07:25 AM

I think just about every mid-1960's color set I have or have seen uses that RCA CTC-15 chassis or a very similar replica: Hoffman, Wards Airline, G.E., Sears, Sylvania. I'm guessing that Motorola, Zenith, and Admiral used their own, different, designs. It appears that by 1966 or 67, more of the other name plates began to use different, newer designs.

Kamakiri 05-25-2003 07:58 PM

She be progressing nicely
 
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Got the faceplate back on the tube today, just as Rob suggested doing, spacing it off with 3 pieces of plastic between the picture tube and the glass, maybe 1/8" thick, injecting the glass with RTV clear silicone around the glass, then after it dried, removing the plastic and putting the RTV in the remaining spaces. A note: use 3 spacers and not 4 when doing this, they move around a lot less as it seems.

So here she is as of tonight.....

Kamakiri 05-25-2003 07:59 PM

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Cabinet cleaned inside and chassis cleaned and halfway in.....with the convergence board, etc yet to be installed.

Rob 05-25-2003 08:37 PM

Tim,

I'm really impressed with your surge of ambition in this project. You will find it much easier I think to put the degausing plate back around the CRT front with the chassis out.

Was the cover glass for the CRT clear or frosted? If frosted I've found that if you leave too much airgap the resultant picture may be fuzzy in the fine detail. I wouldn't go as much as 1/8th inch in this case. Mine was frosted and I could see the defocussing effect even with throat sticks (like popsicle sticks) and they are more like just 1/16" thick. If it was frosted and 1/8" spaced leave it now that it is done. It will probably be OK. You've a much more important challenge ahead, getting the chassis to work.

Rob

Kamakiri 05-25-2003 09:19 PM

It is the frosted glass....

What I did was I kept a small piece of the mouldy stuff to give me a distance guide, the stuff was pretty darn thick. Even if it is slightly fuzzy once it's going, I can easily cure that by tearing the set apart and using a razor blade, undo my work and make it closer up. The chassis is just slid in there at the moment.

And you know, I think that the main reason I was able to do it so quickly (relative to me) is that I did this in the garage. Having undisturbed space is vital to any project.

Kamakiri 05-25-2003 09:22 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Rob
You've a much more important challenge ahead, getting the chassis to work.
Yeah, and knowing my own skill level in such an event, if it doesn't work by throwing some tubes in it, it'll be a display piece ;)

Judging by the fact that it uses those brown sealed caps on the chassis and the fact that the picture tube is so good (btw, it is a 1963 date code), hell, it just might work!

Rob 05-25-2003 09:30 PM

Tim,

There is every chance that it will too. You will want to soft start it though to re-form the supply electrolytics with the HOT removed. I cannot overemphasize the importance of using a variac for this procedure or expect to have to replace the electrolytics.

Do you have a variac? I think you got one from me before a long time ago no? If not I can fix you up with another.

Rob

Kamakiri 05-25-2003 10:08 PM

I still have it. Can't remember how to wire up the damn thing, though.....but I'm sure I'll figger it out.

Kamakiri 06-19-2004 10:19 PM

Free to good home......haven't done anything with it since this thread. Three sets in total to get rid of to make room for the new AV setup in the basement.

The CTC5 and the CT100s are staying though ;)

yrly 06-22-2004 12:53 AM

Tim, terrible shame you did not finish the job up. I would give it the go if I did not have so many darn Masco amps sitting in the workpile in the basement. I sort of lost ambition after doing one, then one needed a cap after I replaced the output tranny and the cap was bolted to the chassis, I got irritated and gave up. :) Then I started piling my stockpile of test equipment around it, fixed an old tube CB radio, then bought that Pioneer 1000TW that will need a new set of outputs on one side as it turns out. Have not done any TV work since I restored my circa 1971 B&W 16 inch Zenith, probably one of the last "Handcrafted" Zeniths, had almost all the original tubes, many of which surprisingly tested good despite its age and the surprising amount of use it saw. I eventually plan to give it a good once over and replace the weaker tubes with NOS ones from my stash, but many of the tubes need to be tested on my Dynamic 85 which is a pain to use. You are lucky you did not pick that one up at Amvets, I thought it was going to be useful after reading the book there at the store and seeing it tested everything under the sun, even Nuvistors and other oddities including odd stuff like those Pentagrid converter tubes used in the Zenith Transoceanic radios, except for the slight problem that it uses symbols like stars, circles, squares, pink hearts, blue diamonds and purple horseshoes (OK, so I made the last three up ;)). Takes forever to test tubes that way, though it seems simple at a glance it gets really frustrating really quickly. If I could somehow find the room though I would gladly bring the old Emerson back to the living world.

smoker76 04-17-2006 08:48 AM

Could we see a photo of this Emerson color?
 
Thanks

Kamakiri 04-17-2006 09:04 PM

PM me if I don't put something up tomorrow, I think I still have the pics at work.

roundscreen 04-18-2006 08:56 AM

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Here is a picture of the emerson in question.
Tim did a real nice job on the glass and he cleaned out the chassis.
I did the chassis repairs and This set works vary well.
btw- I found a back for it too
Ed

smoker76 04-18-2006 02:56 PM

Thanks for showing it!
 
I bet that is a rare one. Looks great!

Steve D. 04-18-2006 08:04 PM

Cleaned up really well
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob
Wow Tim,

You must really be desperate. Not many Emersons around though. That will be a nice looker because it has a good cabinet and front but it will take a LOT of work, plus you really don't want to run one of these color sets without a back for safety reasons.

I have identified the chassis as #120699, 722 in my RCA color TV Service Manual. That chassis was used in the RCA CTC-15 sets. I don't know what year it is. I'd guess 1963.

Have you put the CRT tester on it yet?

You did really good on the first score last week IMO.

Rob

I can't believe this thread is over 3 years old. Glad to finally see a picture of the Emerson as the previous pix were, I assume, lost. Ed, you and Kam did a really nice restoration. My reference has it as a 1964 Emerson. Sams 719 folder 2. CTC-15 clone as Rob points out. Emerson also used this chassis with a few tube changes in their first 25" set.

-Steve D.

Kamakiri 04-19-2006 06:49 AM

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Hah! I got the pics :yippy:

If there are any old threads that are missing what you consider to be vital pics, please PM me and I'll see if I can reattach them.

jpdylon 04-19-2006 10:55 AM

That's a way cool roundie. I've never seen an emerson like that before. Definitely an RCA clone.

Steve D. 04-19-2006 11:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kamakiri
Hah! I got the pics :yippy:

If there are any old threads that are missing what you consider to be vital pics, please PM me and I'll see if I can reattach them.

Tim,

Thanks for finding and posting the original pictures that went with this thread. If I'm not mistaken, all of the AK thread pictures posted prior to a server change sometime back, were lost during the change over.

-Steve D.

Kamakiri 04-19-2006 02:35 PM

Many were. I can grab just about all of them from the first year from an old stored archive.

roundscreen 04-19-2006 08:48 PM

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Here are some screen shots of the emerson. As you can see I have more work to do. The b + filters are on the way out and the crt needs a good alignment. The crt alignment went out when I moved it.
Thank you for the info on it. I was not sure what year it was made.
I have a dumont and the chassis looks the same as the emerson.
This is a good looking emerson and the wood around the bezel is awesome.
Ed

Kamakiri 02-26-2017 06:28 AM

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Fourteen years later, things have come full circle, and she's back at my house. I've grown in my skill sets by many orders of magnitude since I originally rescued her, and now I can continue with a full recap where Ed left off :)

hi_volt 02-26-2017 08:43 AM

Man.....this is an **old** thread...:D

Nice looking set.

Carmine 02-26-2017 10:58 AM

Holy ancient thread Batman! I just got an email telling me it was updated. I think some of the members weren't born when this began.

Good on you Tim for saving it (again).

Electronic M 02-26-2017 11:08 AM

Cool set. That is the first Emerson branded roundy I've seen.

Old is right. I was a radio collector that did not really give a damn about anything computerized much less the internet back then.

SpaceAge 02-26-2017 06:24 PM

I'm impressed your original picture uploads from 2003 have survived all these years.

Captainclock 02-26-2017 08:54 PM

I was in 8th Grade when this thread was made and didn't even know that anything like this existed on the internet, in fact my parents didn't even have internet back then, but we did have Juno Free Email Service, remember that? :yes: So yeah, I wonder if this thread could be considered one of the first threads ever posted on this forum... :scratch2:

Also just to let you know that when this thread was first posted I had already successfully repaired a 1963 Motorola TT22CW AM/FM/FM Stereo Tabletop radio that a friend of mine gave to me who had gotten the radio from its original owner who had it stored away in a closet in his house because the radio was having problems with reception or something like that.
I had also successfully repaired a 1985 vintage Montgomery Wards 13" B & W TV that the same person who gave me the old Motorola Radio had given me, who had gotten the TV from its original owner and when I got it it had an issue with the Vertical and Horizontal Hold being messed up so I readjusted them on the back and sure enough the TV worked again.

I used the B & W TV I fixed for a couple of years until I got my first Color TV which was a 1988 vintage Zenith 13" Color TV with the knob style tuners, and that thing I used up until about a year before the orginal Scheduled DTV Transition before it got postponed.
I used that Zenith with a CATV compatible VCR to watch cable TV on (my parents had Basic Comcast Cable Service for years back when they still had the all analog channels before they went Digital and required you to have a set top box for every TV in the house).
Interestingly enough I did these repairs on my own without the help of the internet... :thmbsp: :yes:

I only wish all of the repairs I have to deal with these days were as simple as my first repairs were. :sigh: Although I wouldn't of found you guys otherwise then... :yes: :thmbsp:

zeno 02-26-2017 08:55 PM

I bet the old bag calls you back & offers you a box of tubes for
a C-note !
Anyhows an RCA clone so the only $$ tube is the H. out.
Looks like a fun project, keep us posted....

73 Zeno:smoke:
LFOD !


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