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Old 11-20-2008, 10:54 PM
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drh4683 drh4683 is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 2,094
Picked up and restored a Grundig 2077

Just so you know, I do step outside of the Zenith spectrum every now and then!

I was able to find one my favorite radios locally. My neighbor in Downers Grove Mr. Hagan had this same radio. As a kid, I was amazed with the way it looked and the sound. Seeing the glow of an EM84 for the first time was something I won't forget. I picked up this Grundig 2077 at a local estate sale in Cicero last weekend. It was in great shape, just needed a good cleaning of the knobs and dial glass. I took all of it apart to clean it right.

I also recapped it, which I did Sunday night. Spent about 6 hours on the radio from start to finish. Its a very tedious recap on these. Ive done a few before, Saba's and Grundigs. My only other Grundig table radio is a 1088. Ive always liked this model as it has the eye tube in the dial glass.

Fortunately, I was the first to service the radio. The interlock screw was still in place and all the adhesive strips were still on all the tubes.

The radio did work when I first found it but not too well. I knew it had alot of potential. All 16 ero caps got replaced immediately. Every one of them leaked off the charts. Ive never seen a good one! They are the worst caps ever. I used cornell dublier caps as they were small like the eros and fit neatly under the chassis. I did use 3 sprague orange drops as I needed some odd values that were not made by CD. Spragues are much more bulky and large, thats the only reason I didnt use them in this radio, as I wanted to maintain an original cap placement and lead dress. Im a stickler on lead dress and not clipping cap leads from the old cap and solder them to the new caps. I always install new caps like they would have been done at the factory. Its more time consuming, but it looks better and its more rewarding when the job is done.

The push button selectors were dirty, so that got cleaned up too, and everything dedusted of course.

You can see some pics of before and after of the chassis and the radio now that its cleaned up. Certianly a keeper for the collection and one to use anytime as well. Typical grundig sound too. Sounds like a live performance.

Anyone know what exact year this model is? Im thinking around 1959-60?
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Last edited by drh4683; 03-14-2010 at 10:09 PM.
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