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Another gem by the General!
After reading about the GE 14" portable in a prior thread, I pulled a somewhat interesting 9" GE portable that came out in 1957, off the to-do shelf. GE made only one year of them, model 9T001. Many of the tubes are strange as well as the CRT.
I ordered a few of the odd-ball tubes from ESRC at the time, a couple of 10C8's and 12CT8's. The CRT's didn't last in any of these sets and were unavailable, except from GE! Maybe some other VKer has experience with this model. |
Is that the one with the HV lead that runs through a socket pin? If so Carl Zimm was going to trade me one for some work at one point, but I forget what happened with that. Those definitely were odd sets.
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Some good picture on this website: https://forum.retrotechnique.org/t/t...le-9t001/16416
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Some discussion of this cute little set on an earlier thread:
http://www.videokarma.org/showthread...ighlight=green jr |
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jr |
Anyone got a datasheet on the CRT? Pictures of the set’s internals look like typical GE build quality…
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https://frank.pocnet.net/sheets/093/9/9QP4.pdf https://picclick.com/9QP4-9-Picture-...949501452.html jr |
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I ran the heater at about 7volts to try to increase emission. |
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There's a Portillos Hotdog's in IIRC VillaPark or Glenn Elyn IL that's built to look like a gigantic Jukebox, among numerous radios on display and ~2-3 TVs there's one of these GEs IIRC in salmon on one of the record shelves on one of the he support beams....IIRC it's the one closest to the ordering counter, but on the side facing away. Used to frequent the place when I was a kid. I even remember the inside of their previous restraunt on that site (it was part of the previous strip mall structure and was plowed down when they updated the buildings of that strip mall). |
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This very GE TV was installed in one amazing car. The San Diego Car Museum has Louie Matar's $75,000 Cadillac on display. Louie outfitted a 1947 Cadillac such that it could go phenomenal distances. He could change the oil in the engine while it was running. He could even change tires while it was running down the road. Quite a marvel.
He had the TV mounted upside down from the roof. I surmise that he reversed the yoke leads so the picture is right side up for viewing. The following link will take you to the YouTube video on this car. About 4:00 into the video, he shows the TV. If you have the time, watch the whole video. It was some amazing car! https://sdautomuseum.org/exhibit/lou...s-fabulous-car |
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