| Jeffhs |
05-08-2010 12:27 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by zenithfan1
(Post 2972774)
It is freakin heavy, I have that exact cabinet but mine is a rectangular from 1965. Heavy. But I think someone should get it the hell out of there before someone does SOMETHING to it, it's never good when regular folks do something to an old tv.
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Indeed. I agree with you 100 percent--someone should get this set before it winds up a busted-up mess of glass and wood. There's way too much of this sort of thing going on these days. People going around breaking necks off CRTs, stealing parts (notably yokes) for the copper wire, name it--it's downright outrageous. My heart sinks every time I read here in the forum of someone having pulled a stunt like that--and it seems there is more of this going on every day. It's made it a lot harder for us VK members to find vintage TVs worth saving; many of the sets a lot of us have seen are now just worthless piles of junk, no thanks to copper thieves and the smash-and-grab idiots who bust up, tear up for parts, or otherwise destroy a TV that could have easily been restored to past glory. I grew up in a Cleveland suburb where this kind of thing started some time in the late '80s-'90s; kids throwing rocks at the screens of TVs (ruining the CRT, of course) that could have been restored with little or no effort, breaking necks off of CRTs, name it, so this has been going on for at least 25 years if not longer. I haven't seen any such nonsense going on (yet) in the small town where I live now; maybe folks in small towns have more respect for these things, or the village has an ordinance banning such destruction. I've been here over ten years and am not yet aware of such an ordinance, but there must be something like it in place here as I have yet to see any smashed, ruined televisions on treelawns anywhere in the village.
That Maggie roundie in the Denver area deserves better than to be smashed and gutted for copper or anything else; after all, Magnavox as we used to know it is gone, so sets like this (the few of them that are left, including this one) absolutely must be saved and restored. I also hope that someone with some respect for these things gets this TV and gets a few years of use out of it. Hitch it to an ATSC->NTSC converter box and it may run for many more years; the stereo is probably in good shape (or restorable) as well, so a little bit of work cleaning and lubricating the record changer and replacing the stylus should result in a sound system to be proud of and enjoyed for many years to come. Those old Maggie stereos looked and sounded great. I've heard a couple of the smaller consoles in operation and am convinced that The Magnavox Company of Fort Wayne, Indiana had winners in these and all their other consoles, including of course the fabulous 3-way stereo theatres with Magnavox's exclusive Total Remote Control system. These, like older Zenith radios and televisions, must be saved and restored because, as I always say about these older systems, they don't make them like that anymore. A crying shame, but true.
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