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[QUOTE=zenith2134;3235695]Zenith K-725 tabletop, tube radio gets used every morning.
My hifi is solid state for now.
Tube televisions see near daily use. Vacuum tube chassis Zenith, RCA, Sears Silvertone, Magnavox, Admiral, RCA, GE.[/QUOTE
The only tube-type stereo system I ever had was a 1960s Zenith phonograph, which worked very well despite its age and despite the fact it was a trash find in the '80s, IIRC. I also patched a Knight-kit FM tuner into the audio system of my Zenith K-2739 (chassis 16K23, 23-inch) television, by connecting the tuner's audio output across the TV's volume control. It worked as well as I expected it would, since the Zenith TV had a 6BN6-6BQ5 audio system and a 6x9 oval speaker in the cabinet.
I eventually replaced both systems (the TV with the FM tuner and the Zenith phono) with a Zenith IS-4041 4-mode stereo entertainment system in the early 1980s. I moved to a very small apartment in 1999, so had to give up the Zenith system; however, I bought a new (at the time) Aiwa bookshelf stereo (AM-FM, cassette, CD) when I moved here. The system sounds great, probably even better than the Zenith 4-mode system I had at my previous residence, since the Aiwa system has a 4-channel surround-sound audio system (4x50 watts per channel). I don't and have not used the surround speakers, because my apartment is so small (one bedroom) and, again, I cannot run the system loud enough to make 4-channel surround sound worth the effort. To make matters even worse, I am almost deaf in one ear due to a brain injury at birth, so I cannot hear stereo normallly unless I use headphones; even then, I don't notice the stereo effect anywhere nearly as well as I would had I been born with normal hearing in both ears. . . . Oh, well.
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Jeff, WB8NHV
Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002
Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten.
Last edited by Jeffhs; 09-15-2021 at 09:09 PM.
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