![]() |
General Electric A55 Restoration
A rare find I was using as a daily driver in the dining room for a few years after I replaced caps.
Now I finally decided to restore the cabinet which was never very nice then abused by two tabbies as a step-stool to the top of a hutch. http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8371/8...7040044f13.jpg |
Very tall cats. Stop by some time neighbor!
|
Sure will once I get this one done Dave. I need to replace veneer and match-restore its original finish.
This model is the same chassis as a A-53 but in a console. Once some major progress is made, I link a new photo stream. My VK 20meg picture limit has been reached. |
Quote:
Your A55 is a newer, better set with AVC. The table model is a A-52. FYI.:scratch2: |
The veneer has been successfully applied to the top and front accent blocks of this radio.
For the top, the original I steamed off appeared to be black walnut. Once off, the top panel was just 1/4", panels of two species joined. I decided to add a second, whole panel for a substrate for the new walnut veneer to bond to. It can later be edge rounded using the router to mirror the quarter-round below it, a common art-deco feature. http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8096/8...ac7abde3a8.jpg http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8374/8...71a58e6ba0.jpg Since the veneer "blocks" appeared to be burl maple, I chose the same species but it was thin and sort of lumpy. I took advice of Bob Anderson and coated both veneer and base then letting sit for a few hours. Ideally, I suppose the glue needs time to soak into both veneer and base substrate. I used Titebond woodworkers glue spread with a foam brush, a thin but complete coating is enough. I clamped it a few hours later after the glue dried http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8391/8...cbe94a0f13.jpg Using my steam iron to remove old veneer was one easy task. I used it again a day after to flatten any "bubbles" by re-softening the glue. The veneer will need to be trimmed with a hobby knife for an original-looking fit. The stain for the new veneer work has to be selected...but its hard to match the original colors. The question is: do I match what the present finish is, or try to restore to the original color? http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8229/8...eba964ed6c.jpg Here is the burl chip in the middle of all the stain samples I could use, after I hit the adjacent finish with Howards Restor-a-finish, the color may be different. http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8085/8...e64c50e20d.jpg Many factors seem to affect the color you're trying to restore to after 77 years. The patina of the wood, a characteristic of age, combines with an aging original finish to make something that is not exactly an exact match to a standard palette. The remainder of this radios finish is faded and scratched and will be addressed also. |
I used some Howard's restor-a-finsh on the front to better match the finish and that was a GOOD decision.
It looks like mahogany was the finish applied to the walnut veneer, so now I shlep back to but yet another can of stain. You only get one chance to do this right... |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:32 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
©Copyright 2012 VideoKarma.org, All rights reserved.