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-   -   1956 Westinghouse H742T4 Turquoise Radio (http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=260037)

Robb 11-15-2013 10:01 AM

1956 Westinghouse H742T4 Aqua blue Radio
 
Bought this 1956 Westinghouse H742T4 Radio on ebay.
Nice little aqua blue colored radio. Only paid $15.00 for it.
Needs a good cleaning and cap replacement.

http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5549/1...e5b3e7ff_b.jpg
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5527/1...a4774113_b.jpg
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2884/1...f2d5fa5a_b.jpg
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7298/1...0a07edff_b.jpg
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7330/1...eb3e1cf8_b.jpg
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5526/1...e6385f49_b.jpg

mstaton 11-15-2013 10:27 AM

Intersting that it's only a 4 tuber

Kamakiri 11-15-2013 11:49 AM

Neat little radio. I used to have the white version of the exact set :)

dieseljeep 11-15-2013 01:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kamakiri (Post 3087239)
Neat little radio. I used to have the white version of the exact set :)

It's a little newer than 1956. The back shows the newer Westinghouse logo. IIRC, they started using it in the early 1960's. Your basic 4 tube autodyne short superhet. Westinghouse, Admiral and GE made millions of them, for many years running.
Not much of a DX receiver. Intended for local reception. :boring:

WISCOJIM 11-15-2013 01:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dieseljeep (Post 3087245)
It's a little newer than 1956. The back shows the newer Westinghouse logo. IIRC, they started using it in the early 1960's.

It's in Photofact 301 which came out in March of 1956.

Very cute and stylish radio!

.

davet753 11-15-2013 04:49 PM

I have one of those (in a different color). They work pretty well for a 4-tube set, but they will not bring in much except for local stations.

Robb 11-15-2013 07:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WISCOJIM (Post 3087246)
It's in Photofact 301 which came out in March of 1956.

Very cute and stylish radio!

.

Yes, 1956. I dont know if they made this radio later ?

Dave A 11-15-2013 08:20 PM

I would have loved to be in the designers meetings for all of these styles. Who were they channeling or copying like in this unique for the day style? What were they thinking? Then again, all days have their styles...for their 15 minutes or so.

Should we design for rockets? Olds Rocket 88 comes to mind. Bombs that will incinerate us but be a good form for a radio? Hey GE did that with the Atomic knob and we all lived and collect them now. Maybe just a multi-angular design that is not rectangular and owes its design to modern art of the day.

All if these are the original "mid-century", "atomic", "Eames", etc. that we all wince at when listed.

What sent them down this trail?

old_coot88 11-15-2013 08:35 PM

Dunno about the derivation of the trendy monikers, but the little 4-tubers were sometimes known generically as "metro" radios since they were only good for local reception. Some were superhet with no IF stage, and some were TRFs.

Robb 12-03-2013 01:11 PM

Posted a video of it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHjeGhwYPZc

DavGoodlin 12-03-2013 02:58 PM

That logo inconsistency is too interesting to ignore.

The back cover has the post 1960 logo, yet the front has the 1953-60 logo.

IIRC the light bulb plant in Bloomfield, NJ used the post-1960 logo earlier as well.

Robb 12-03-2013 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DavGoodlin (Post 3088777)
That logo inconsistency is too interesting to ignore.

The back cover has the post 1960 logo, yet the front has the 1953-60 logo.

IIRC the light bulb plant in Bloomfield, NJ used the post-1960 logo earlier as well.

No idea why. This one is the same as mine, mismatched logo.

http://s8.postimg.org/fiwmnpclh/1234.jpg

boora2 12-08-2013 10:56 AM

Had a lurid green version of that,made for Britain with a big multitap mains dropper thingy in side,guy had drilled holes inside to let the heat out,and mice in,naturally.Made a nice nest,warm and cosy,until our cat came along,just tore the back off and gave them to his kittens to learn to be assassins.

dieseljeep 12-09-2013 09:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by boora2 (Post 3089146)
Had a lurid green version of that,made for Britain with a big multitap mains dropper thingy in side,guy had drilled holes inside to let the heat out,and mice in,naturally.Made a nice nest,warm and cosy,until our cat came along,just tore the back off and gave them to his kittens to learn to be assassins.

I had read somewhere that the U.S. manufacturers were building radios for export to Britain, in the earlier 50's, but not that late.
BTW, did yours have long wave, as well.

wa2ise 12-09-2013 02:19 PM

A cold chassis version of that set (using the 12AU6 and the 12AV6) would make a fairly decent AM tuner for local stations. Only 1 IF transformer would make for a fairly wide IF response (more audio high frequencies), and no AVC circuit would make for better AM demodulation.


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