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-   -   MZTV Museum Toronto (http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=261206)

Robb 04-02-2014 11:00 PM

MZTV Museum Toronto
 
Here's a TV museum here in toronto.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/wordfr...7621660892807/

decojoe67 04-03-2014 04:37 AM

I've heard about them years ago. They had published a very nice book highlighting some of the sets. Very nice collection.

Steve McVoy 04-03-2014 05:47 AM

They have been closed for "remodeling" for a couple of years.

Kamakiri 04-04-2014 06:45 AM

I visited the museum about a dozen years ago. Among the other very noteworthy things in the collection was a Predicta Pedestal with FIVE knobs below the channel knob, and in desperate need of a bath (they don't even clean anything there as to preserve its original state.....weird, but whatever).

I asked the curator (not Moses) if the knobs were hooked to anything and what they did. His response, "we don't know, we've never had the back off".

.....

rld-tv01 04-04-2014 10:50 AM

I asked the curator (not Moses) if the knobs were hooked to anything and what they did. His response, "we don't know, we've never had the back off".

They could still research technology, gather history and information etc without touching the set. There's probably some Philco tech bulletin somewhere descibing the set. Even art historians learn about artists, paint, history, political events of the time influencing the artists.

decojoe67 04-04-2014 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rld-tv01 (Post 3100095)
I asked the curator (not Moses) if the knobs were hooked to anything and what they did. His response, "we don't know, we've never had the back off".

They could still research technology, gather history and information etc without touching the set. There's probably some Philco tech bulletin somewhere descibing the set. Even art historians learn about artists, paint, history, political events of the time influencing the artists.

When I went to the Museum Of The Moving Imagine at Astoria Studios in Queens, NY, the vintage TV's were mostly left "as-is". This is common in museums. People often are mistaken when "museum quality" is used to describe something, especially antique cars. It does not mean pristine, it means it's all there and presentable. Close-up it shows wear and defects.

Kamakiri 04-07-2014 06:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rld-tv01 (Post 3100095)
I asked the curator (not Moses) if the knobs were hooked to anything and what they did. His response, "we don't know, we've never had the back off".

They could still research technology, gather history and information etc without touching the set. There's probably some Philco tech bulletin somewhere descibing the set. Even art historians learn about artists, paint, history, political events of the time influencing the artists.

I dunno. Were it me, I'd grab a screwdriver and just pull the back off to see what's inside, even if it was being "preserved". Certainly if it's a Predicta, that back's been off before :)


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