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#1
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Another oddball set
Is it just me, or is the Sparton on this postcard really weird looking? It looks more English than American to me.
http://cgi.ebay.com/Vintage-Postcard...ayphotohosting |
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#2
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This is most likely a modern repro postcard, with a company address
with ZIP code in the back. Somebody on e..y is selling similar repro cards (he says it plainly) showing an early sixties Electrohome portable TV carried by a young lady. I prefer old TVs to old TV postcards, but it's true that cards don't need recapping and spare tubes... |
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#3
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Many Brazilian sets from the second half of the 1960's and early 1970's also looked like that as well - my first TV was a 1974 B&W Philco Ford table model with a similar design to that one on the postcard.
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#4
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In my family there was a badged-as-Muntz console stereo/TV combo that is now found in Sams folders as being associated with the name "Concerto" as a unit. I have read some legal documents regarding extensive litigation as regards these sets from the early '60s, reagarding models of such description as sold under a different name, with fraudulent claims in such sale to benefits and incentives if a new owner of such set should manage to get a neighbor or friend to buy.... Apparently these sets sold for quite a bit more than the ones sold by the Madman himself....
The CRT was masked in similar fashion as to as shown, with a lot of the clear (appearing as black) border showing as a wide fringe of about 3/4 to a full inch revealed in the mask--as opposed to the more standard of between a quarter and half inch showing.
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#5
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That's a set with a "push through" design, most mid 60s-onward european sets are built this way,
Most push through sets are based on the "shellbond" CRT launched by Philips in 1964, this was the first CRT to feature a tensioned rimband as an implosion protection device, eliminating the need for separate glass panels or epoxy bonded lenses |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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It may have been a technical advance, but, talking about just the style of this sets, I particularly don't like them. I really love the older ones, from the 1950's, I think they are more elegant, more glamourous.
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#7
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#8
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I really don't have much an opinion about them. I never saw one of them in person, so it's hard for me to say. Judging just by pictures of Halolight sets, I would say that they are a odd device... I believe that their advertising, saying that the Halolight feature was "better for viewing confort" had no foundation are all on real science, am I right?
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#9
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