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I am going to look for a 21AXP22!
I am about to ride my bike from Boca to Fort Lauderdale to verify that the car radio repair shop still exists. It is the place where, like 3 years ago, the owner told me he had a 21AXP22. I found it on streetview and the building is there but roadwork could indicate it is gone. It is on the corner of Oakland Park Blvd & NE 12th Terrace.
So, if you never hear from me again you know I was shot by some thug as I am entering dangerous areas! Like Los Angeles dangerous! Every now and then I go on long bike rides to "clear my head". I wish I had a date but I guess I am more like most members here than anybody wants to admit :) |
I just got back. The place looks to be operating as usual. It is Kennedy Electronics. I would bet he still has it. Good Luck
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I looked also
While in the area around Pompano I didn't find it. The place found has always been a car radio repair shop. Very curious. By the way that area is fine crime wise. Ive driven all around the gold coast for 34 years servicing equipment and am familiar with most areas.
I don't need a CRT but like others I thought I could help locate an asset for another VK member whil in the area. |
I grew up down in Ft laud, man that place has changed. Back then the place to avoid was around the thurnderbird drive in off sunrise.
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I was mistaken when I wrote I thought mabe Pompano. It's like northwest Fort Lauderdale area: Kennedy Electronics 1246 East Oakland Park Boulevard, Oakland Park, FL(954) 565-0123
His building say's: Car Radio Repair on one side but lists TV, VCR, etc. on other side. It is very small building and I bet he rarely does TV. I suspect he justs works there to kill time waitng for a high offer on his land as he likely owns the whole place. Prolly been there since the '60's. That is my guess. In the interest of keeping his 21AXP from going to waste I warn all here that you should be careful in how you approach him. Use your best "getting along with ornery, old, loner TV men skills" or he may deny having it. I am sure all of you know the type of character I am describing very well. He was a total jerk to me at first but after chit-chat he became quite nice and after telling him about my rebuild of a 21FJP22 he mentioned he had a metal-coned 21" color tube. I keep forgetting if he mentioned it as specifically being a 21AXP22 or not as it was like 3 or 4 years ago and somebody blew a bunch of smoke in my face which had me not 100% of my usuall perceptive self. The overall impression I had was that he had the tube for a long time and it was likely saved for being a good tube/conversation piece. I doubt he mentions it to many people but logically the correct approach will get the facts of what it is and a possible sale. Good Luck |
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Here is the shop's contact information. Kennedy Electronics 1246 East Oakland Park Boulevard Oakland Park, FL (954) 565-0123 I gave the shop a call at 5:20 P.M., but it went straight to an answering machine. I left him a pretty generic message that said I was searching for color CRTs from the '50s and '60s. Also, I said I'd give him a call next week, if I did not hear from him before then. I'll let you know what he says, later. I hope he has a warehouse full. |
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Again, about approaching that man for the CRT: I strongly recommend consulting the big shots here like Steve McVoy or whomever demonstrates proper adult business ways on how to talk to him and what to say or you may likely lose the possiblity. The man can be nice but clearly could be the sort to easily get bothered and let the tube rot until he dies and others will likely throw it in the garbage. |
If they did not cuss you out for from being from the north then they are probably like the mean folks in lakeland who are extremely crabby to all human beings regardless of where they are from. Back when I lived in lakeland I found the best way to deal with folks like those you saw in the KFC was to look either like I possessed the same grudge against the world, or to look irritated to the point where they would be scared to talk to me (as I both looked like and was ready to shout down the first jerk dumb enough to try to get on my nerves).
As for the technician I would try to be polite and try to find a topic of conversation that interests him as most people become more amiable when disgussing things they enjoy. If he really does have a 21AXP22 that would be a rare find indeed. Tom C. |
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I worked one summer in a TV repair shop back in the early 70's in Davie, well if you call it worked, more like after school day care since I was 14 and did not get paid. I did get to mess around and fix some AA5's, but mostly just got in the way and messed up the inventory. It was a little mom and pop shop, think the wife did the books, the husband and one tech did the work. I went back there a few year back hoping to find some sign of the old shop, but alas it was long gone. You really can't go home again...
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I never met an "old TV guy" who I didn't like! Some of them have become good friends of mine. A couple of those guys seem extremely grouchy at first but they warm up pretty quickly. Has nothing to do with TV and nothing to do with age, I don't think, just different personalities. If I lived in the neighborhood I'd stop in for a chat, the gentleman could likely teach someone a lot.
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Would you agree? |
Yes, to hang in there and repair things that, logic might tell you, can't be repaired-it does take certain character traits. Those who are still doing it for a living (or trying to) do seem to a have a love for the job.
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I glad I got out of the “business” when I did (1984). The writing was on the wall at that time that TV’s were going to be a disposable product. From time to time people still ask me to ‘look’ at their televisions. More often than not if the set is 10 – 15 years old the parts are not available or it is just not worth repairing. If home entertainment equipment was my only source of income I would be grumpy too. Doogie
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unfortunately, i was born in 85 with the same love and passion with electronics engineering and repair as the old TV guys. But i didn't finish school until 2006 (regular school, then college). One problem: the world of repair is just about done and gone before i even got started. So of course im just struggling. Ive been in the repair/tinkerer niche since i was just a wee kid, and for what? waste. I just wish it would "come back" to an extent. the niche and passion i set my life out for is gone from underneath me, just like a soul being taken away with no reprimands. I am no better than the uneducated street bum down the corner now. (not literally, but you know what i mean). I remember when my teachers would boast on about finishing your education, or you would be faced with a stereotypical job of "would you like fries with that".... Well, i finished my education, And i cant even get a "would you like fries with that" Where is the logic in this?? I remember when teachers would tell me that the field i am getting into "your going to make a lot of money". Which may be true, but i haven't sought it out yet.. I just may be too fresh/new/young yet to see the opportunities. I must need glasses. I set my life out for this to be my mainstream work, owning/operating/working in computer and electronics repair industry. But there is one problem, where is the industry? Oh i forgot.... F$#* ME. Now its just a hobby anymore. That is enough to make a young pup break the boiling point of anger. (i already have anger management issues). But i guess i just fit in with the rest of the crowd ;-) Most of my mentors are retired out of the field, long gone, already made their living. Good for them. Wheres mine? oh i forgot. its a hobby now :-) But enough of my problems, thats all we need, is another "problem" with a never-ending list of them. There has to be more youngsters out there in my same shoes? |
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Sanyo and Sharp sets with bad caps and flybacks GEs with the griplet problems RCAs with the tuner solder issues Philips sets with the white (Bad) Flybacks GE PC chassis with the bad C621 Sonys with bad IF section solder Later Sonys with 2SC4834's and MX0841's bad Of course, there were the dogs and oddball stuff too, but 90% fixable, all profitable! Parts were plentiful up until 2002, and lately, you have to watch out for the counterfeit semiconductors. Growing up in a TV shop taught me patience, customer service, resourcefulness, and futility....oh, and electronics too! Cheers, |
Is that MX0841 a regulator? If so, I'm told that's what went wrong with the 36" trini I dropped off at my folks house not long ago, it's a hard to find part if you want genuine.
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There was up until the last year or so also plenty of STK convergence jobs on projection tvs. My favorite was the Hitachi with the separate convergence board. No need to pull the whole chassis to change the convergence STKs. Just a few connectors and out pops that little board. Some Samsungs were like that too. The trouble now is getting genuine STKs. Also people were having us put lamps in their DLP tvs. Easy money until people figured out how to do it themselves and get the lamps cheap on the net or replaced with a flat screen. Also the famous Samsung color wheel on their DLPs was easy money. On those projection tvs we also made lots of money on CTC169 Chassis direct view and projection in the early 90s -2000s . They had lots of common failures.Also lots of flyback replacements on the PTK195 chassis.Theres lots of common easy fixes on the last ones the ITC 222 but there's dogs too. The biggest nightmare is when these leak fluid. Now RCA no longer makes the top hat seal that fails on them and earlier chassis. Also we have Sony warranty so we got to change all those optic blocks they had trouble with.Pretty easy once you did a few and they paid good. All that is gone now as Sony repairs have expired on them. They're just offering customers a discount on a new unit as compensation if they complain about the issue on their Grand Wega. Also Samsung has the capacitor recall and DLP chip recall. I love all the flat screens with power supply electrolytic caps that swell up and still see them but the work is drying up.They're just getting too cheap to replace I guess. It's getting so the only way to stay afloat is to do warranty/service contract work and for some reason another shop 65 miles away has gotten priority on the work for some reason. Maybe they do it cheaper? Maybe faster because they have more manpower? The owner goes out as well as a tech on the road. Only I go on the road here. the owner hasn't worked on a tv in years. They even have a secretary to answer the phone and she probably gets the parts ordered and claims in more efficiently I guess. The work is getting pretty thin these days.:sigh: |
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I've got one of the Sonys that's not covered by any of the warranty or class action lawsuits. Bad Optical block - 1250 bucks new or over 600 for a reconditioned one that won't last more than a year. Sony settled all but one lawsuit, and my model (KDG-E42A10) and a few others were never covered. I got it as a gift, so no skin off my back. I replaced it with a new Samsung LCD that I'm quite happy with. Quote:
Cheers, |
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Cheers, |
How can I verify which one went bad? It's blinking the front light, and the code it comes back to is excessive HV. Any ideas? It's gonna go to the curb if I can't fix it, which would be a shame since it's such a nice set.
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oh BTW, the sammys STILL have color wheel failures, even the new ones (thinline DLPs). As far as service contract work, we signed up with ServicePower and havent gotten ANY calls. EVER. dont know why. It used to be booming couple years back when i worked for a small time shop. ServicePower said they didnt have anyone in the coverage area we have chosen. Maybe thats why? LOL no calls to support the coverage area. |
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