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  #1  
Old 10-20-2004, 09:32 PM
roundscreen roundscreen is offline
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tims roundscreens

Hi ak my name is ed. Tim gave me 3 roundscreen color sets in july. A emerson,silvertone and philco. I repaired the emerson and silvertone. haven't had the time to fix the philco. Tim asked me to post pictures so here they are. i will also post pictures of my other sets. Most of them are roundscreen color sets but i do have some cool looking b-w sets too.
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  #2  
Old 10-20-2004, 09:40 PM
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Kamakiri Kamakiri is offline
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Well ALL RIGHT!!!!

I'm glad to see them live again! How much work did they need?
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  #3  
Old 10-20-2004, 09:53 PM
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ceebee23 ceebee23 is offline
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keeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeewl

great looking sets mate....great to see them operating!
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  #4  
Old 10-21-2004, 06:52 AM
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Sandy G Sandy G is offline
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Welcome aboard, pal ! Nice to see a few more old roundies saved from oblivion ! Think you'll like it here-there's quite a contingent of us old TV nuts, most of whom are willing to share their experiences.-Sandy G.
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  #5  
Old 10-21-2004, 07:12 AM
jstout66 jstout66 is offline
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Hey Roundscreen! The pictures look pretty good on those sets! Would also like to hear what it took to get em going and also some chassis pix
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  #6  
Old 10-21-2004, 08:03 AM
roundscreen roundscreen is offline
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Thank you. i am glad u like them. The wood on the emerson is so cool. Tim repaired the safty glass on the emerson and he did a nice job. Here is a list of repairs. emerson- tubes-1 power filter-hv wire and cup-horz cent control- resolder grounds and tube sockets-clean tuner- cap in vert.
silvertone-repair flyback-resolder grounds and color tube sockets-replace horz out,damper, hv rectfier and reg tubes-replace horz afc diodes.
Good thing i wrote this stuff down. I have been running the sets so more problems will show up. yes i am a tv nut, big time. been doing this for over 25 years. here is a picture of the emerson chassis also check out this1950 emerson b-w . picked it up in the east side. It was in a attic. It Has a working metel crt.
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  #7  
Old 10-24-2004, 04:49 PM
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Carmine Carmine is offline
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Those are all beautiful sets with amazing pictures. You are to be commended sir.

Now can you please explain how a Re-Max real estate ad fits in with a burning, wrecked car?

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Last edited by Carmine; 10-24-2004 at 04:53 PM.
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  #8  
Old 10-24-2004, 05:10 PM
colortrakker colortrakker is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Carmine
Now can you please explain how a Re-Max real estate ad fits in with a burning, wrecked car?
Well, all right. The spot takes place on the set of an action movie being shot. The actress is selling her house, and for comic relief the agent flies over the scene in his hot air balloon to tell Actress (wearing the NTSC-accurate red in the first screenshot) that he sold her house. Whatever.

roundscreen - Zenith, Admiral and Motorola gave their sets names too. Zenith, if I remember, named their sets well into the '80s.

I get the feeling that as nice as your Asbury looks, the pictures may not be doing it full justice. Impressive, indeed.
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  #9  
Old 10-24-2004, 09:06 PM
roundscreen roundscreen is offline
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Hi ak
carmine That is a vary good question. sorry i do not know. i was too busy messing around with the camera.
color trakker. someone should bring back putting names on tvs. Do they still make all wood cabnets? i haven't seen one in a long time.
steve- i checked out your site and that wingate is a vary good looking tv. the ct100 is awesome. your whole collection is awesome. the sets and screen pictures .How do you get such good screen shots with flash on?
My camera is a 1 yo cannon power shot A300 paid 340.00 with the tax.
dirt cheap. been working vary well. does eat battries when u use flash.
but most of them do. When i resize the pictures some detail is lost.
Here is some more eye candy. this is a rca i found in the trash. ctc20
the cabnet is water damaged on the top. i wish i was better at repairing the cabnets. Have alot of them that need refinishing. the chassis is clean. yes the crt has been changed. the old one was shot. It looks funny with the dark green screen. the old one is more blueish.
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  #10  
Old 10-28-2004, 04:44 PM
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Roundscreen,

First, welcome to AK. I've been a member here for about 18 months, give or take, and can say there is a very fine group of antique TV and radio collectors in these forums. I've gotten a lot of help finding troubles in some of my old sets from the guys here, so I can recommend AK highly, in its entirety.

I had a Sears Silvertone roundie in the early 1970s. It was an old set one of my neighbors in my hometown had had sitting in his garage for some years, but after I got it home (thank goodness I only lived one street over from where this fellow was, because the set was in a metal cabinet, had a round glass 21FJP22 CRT, and weighed at least a ton), I managed to get it to work halfway decently after a couple minor "repairs" under the chassis. I put the word "repairs" in quotes because these, I blush to admit, were not true repairs (I've been working with electronics, TV, radio, ham radio, etc. since I was eight years old--I'm now 48) and heaven knows I should have known better, but the thing was I didn't have a replacement handy for the circuit breaker at the time, so I jumpered across the old one. The on-off switch was bad as well; I jumpered that too, and simply used the line cord plug as an on/off control.

The set worked--well, not perfectly (the convergence was way off, and I didn't have a dot/crosshatch/bar generator at the time as this was my first in what eventually evolved into a long string of color sets), but I was thrilled anyhow at having at least gotten this thing to make a color picture on the three (at that time) VHF network stations from Cleveland. It continued to work well the next three years, surviving a 20-mile move and being carried up three flights of stairs when I moved (the first time) in '72, but in the latter part of 1973 I managed to ruin the video amp/output circuit board while trying to replace a defective video output tube (6AW8). I did not realize that the replacement had one slightly bent pin, and I was pressing down on the tube to put it in the socket; suddenly I heard a sickening crunch and watched in horror as the tube socket clunked to the bottom of the set.

I used a 1961 Philco 19" b&w portable TV the next two years until I moved back to my hometown in 1975. (A 12" Sharp portable I had also had since 1970 had bitten the dust some time earlier; just what went wrong with it I don't remember anymore, as it has been well over thirty years since it went bad and I got rid of it.) I left the Silvertone roundie behind for the home's owner (my dad's second wife who divorced him in '75, when we left and went back to my hometown) to deal with; not knowing anything about old televisions, she probably put the thing out for the trash eventually.

That Silvertone was, as I said, the first in a very long string of color TV sets I owned from then until now. Most of them (in fact, every one except the last three sets I have owned) were trash-day finds; I managed to get every one of the older sets working--again, not perfectly, but well enough to watch on the antenna in our attic.

Times change, however, and in 1979 I decided I wanted a new set, so I bought a Zenith 13" portable, which worked well for the next three years; then I bought another 13" Zenith with one-knob electronic tuning. That set still worked when it was replaced by an Emerson 19" color set (rectangular tube and electronic digital tuning) in 1989. The Emerson was replaced by a Zenith 19" table set which I still have, and in fact the Zenith works exceptionally well even now, despite the fact it was made in 1995, roughly the middle of the period when Zenith's quality was taking one heck of a nosedive and was headed fast for rock bottom (some time before Gold Star acquired the company and made an utter shambles of it--grrrrrrrr!).

I moved again, of necessity, into a small apartment in a small northern Ohio village in autumn 1999. I did not take either small portable color set with me, but bought a new RCA CTC185, which is in the living room in my apartment today and makes a beautiful picture, especially since the cable system in this small town was rebuilt from the ground up last spring.

Say what you will about the quality of RCA's late '80s-'90s TVs, but my set has not given me one bit of trouble (except for the RF antenna port snapping off the tuner PC board after I'd had the set a few months) since I bought it nearly five years ago. I was kinda' upset that the warranty did not cover the cost of the repair, but....that's the way it goes, I guess. What's important is that this TV makes a very good picture on cable (this is the first TV I've ever owned with a dark-tint inline CRT and automatic color controls--the picture looks like a picture postcard on every station) and works whenever I turn it on, no problems whatsoever (knock on wood).

Again, welcome to AK. As I said, this is a grand bunch of folks, all willing to help out fellow members with any problems they may have. I for one look forward to seeing more of your posts in the future.

Kind regards,
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  #11  
Old 10-28-2004, 08:41 PM
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Steve D. Steve D. is offline
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First, Carmine, I think RCA still offers a couple of wood (wood grained hardboard?) style cabinets.
I guess naming models got to be a bit corny or old fashioned some years back. My CTC 5 "Wingate" for example was named for an RCA engineering executive.

Roundscreen, I'm glad you enjoyed my site, Thanks for the kind comments. From the looks of the fine off screen pictures you provided, I don't think you need much advice on picture taking. I took the CT-100 Rose Parade pix using a borrowed digital camera. I had no idea what I was doing. Just dimmed the room lights and shut off the flash. The picture tube provided the light source. The other off screen
pix were shot by a friend using the same technique. I'm currently shopping for a digital camera to update my web page.

Steve
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  #12  
Old 10-29-2004, 09:41 AM
roundscreen roundscreen is offline
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Thanks jeffths. The people in ak are great. They have so much knowlege in electronics and It is an honor to be here. You kinda started out the same way i did. the first set i worked on was a 1962 19" b-w zenith my dad gave me. the switch was bad so i solderd in a jumper. Wish i still had that set. it ran for many years. In 75 i bought a rca 19" xl 100 color. the only thing i did to that set was clean the tuner and That set got alot of use. Sold it in 86. Oh the crunch of a pc board. sends a chill up the spine. I did that to a rca roundie. man was i pissed. i did fix it but it diden't last long so i used the set for parts. When i bought my house in 79 i started building my collection.
now i have about 40 working sets and way to many parts sets. Please don't get me wrong i think rcas are the best sets ever made. next in line would be zenith. look at how many of the old ones we get working. and they work vary well.
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  #13  
Old 11-07-2004, 05:01 PM
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old_tv_nut old_tv_nut is offline
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set names

Regarding set names - I didn't work in that department, but I think at Zenith they used to refer to an atlas for town names, and then do research on a long list of names that had been used by other manufacturers to make sure they hadn't been used already.

If there's someone else from "big Z" on this forum, maybe they can straighten me out on this.
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