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old_tv_nut 11-30-2012 08:45 AM

Early B&W? or color?
 
1 Attachment(s)
Here's a postcard advertising TV service using RCA tubes, using a picture of part of the bottom of a chassis.

The puzzle for all you experts is: can the chassis be identified?

dieseljeep 11-30-2012 08:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by old_tv_nut (Post 3055417)
Here's a postcard advertising TV service using RCA tubes, using a picture of part of the bottom of a chassis.

The puzzle for all you experts is: can the chassis be identified?

It looks like a KCS81, or simular from the 1952-53 era. I see the two 5U4 sockets near the power transformer. :yes:

radiotron 11-30-2012 10:13 AM

its a b/w

N2IXK 11-30-2012 10:21 AM

On the upper right side, it appears that there is one ceramic octal socket on that chassis?

Seems out of place on a mass-produced consumer item like a TV set. Usually you only see those on military and industrial gear...

John Marinello 11-30-2012 11:20 AM

Hint: 15-20 electron tubes.

dieseljeep 11-30-2012 12:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by N2IXK (Post 3055421)
On the upper right side, it appears that there is one ceramic octal socket on that chassis?

Seems out of place on a mass-produced consumer item like a TV set. Usually you only see those on military and industrial gear...

I don't know why they used them, but they did! They were also shock-mounted. They probably got a good buy on them, so why not. :scratch2:

N2IXK 11-30-2012 02:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dieseljeep (Post 3055432)
I don't know why they used them, but they did! They were also shock-mounted. They probably got a good buy on them, so why not. :scratch2:

Which tube was installed in it? Presumably the shock mounting was for microphonics?

Einar72 11-30-2012 04:57 PM

I believe, IIRC, it was the Horizontal oscillator. My KCS-47 Fairfield had that arrangement.

old_tv_nut 11-30-2012 08:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by John Marinello (Post 3055429)
Hint: 15-20 electron tubes.

I saw that, but there is no reason the text would correspond to the picture.

I suspected B&W anyway.

One more thing - a trimmer cap under the chassis doesn't seem like an optimum design.

cbenham 11-30-2012 10:14 PM

:D
Quote:

Originally Posted by old_tv_nut (Post 3055466)
I saw that, but there is no reason the text would correspond to the picture.

I suspected B&W anyway.

One more thing - a trimmer cap under the chassis doesn't seem like an optimum design.

It's not a Muntz--Too many parts. :D

Cliff

wa2ise 12-01-2012 05:46 PM

Look at all those wax caps and bumble bees! :eek: That will keep you busy recapping this post card. :D

Eric H 12-01-2012 06:09 PM

It looks too crowded for an RCA chassis, I wonder if they added some extra parts to make it look more impressive?

dieseljeep 12-01-2012 06:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eric H (Post 3055538)
It looks too crowded for an RCA chassis, I wonder if they added some extra parts to make it look more impressive?

It looks like one of the 5U4's is missing.
I have one of those sets in line to recap. There's a lot of them in there, and 'lytics as well. :sigh:

kx250rider 12-02-2012 11:12 AM

Definitely B&W and early 50s; maybe late 40s. I see the horizontal oscillator transformer mounted under the chassis next to the two trimpots for horizontal stab. & linearity, if I recall what those do.

Charles

Penthode 12-07-2012 05:05 PM

Look at the attached. Does it look familiar?

I recognized it as an RCA from the early 50's. It actually is a kcs68 circa 1951. Note the position of the tubes. Incidently I looked to schematic to find that badly mounted trimmer capacitor is actually across the over-coupled transformer link at the input of the first video IF amplifier. And the ceramic tube socket was used by all the RCA's of the period for the horizontal oscillator tube. I believe it was one of the best designed B&W TV sets ever built (apart from that lousy trimmer!)


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