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#1
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John Folsom and I wrestled over this issue a few months back on a ctc7 set. Neither one of us could figure out how to remove the glass without removing the crt from the back side and taking all the trim appart. It appeared that if we were able to remove the trim at the top of the glass, there was a high likelyhood that the trim would get bent or damaged in the process.
If there is a way to do this without destrouing the retaining strip at the top of the glass, I would shure like to know how you did it. It does not seem possible to remove the trim without damaging it. But a person would have to asssume that RCA must have provided a method to get the safety glass off so a person could clean the inside, without removing the crt and all associated hardware. Has anybody actualy done this from the front and if so what is the trick????
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Vacuum tubes are used in Wisconsin to help heat your house. New Web Site under developement ME http://AntiqueTvGuy.com |
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#2
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I figured it out.
![]() First, you want to roll the brass U trim outward from the top edge, while pushing up on it from below. I found a putty knife works well for this, something narrow will dent the wood. You need to lift it off those tabs along the top the retainers. Next, slide the outside of the retainer mechanism to the right, then fold the retainer outward from the slots behind (they fold in the center). There are two retainers, left and right of the CRT center. Be ready to catch the safety glass when you remove that second retainer. Mine about fell forward into my lap before I realized it was moving. The bottom trim looks to be the same U channel as the top, I have not figured out how it's retained. It's holding mechanism seems different than the top. Last edited by Kevin Kuehn; 08-26-2011 at 01:37 PM. |
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#3
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Sorry, I missed minimans post by a minute while I was uploading pictures.
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#4
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Thanks Kevin. So the trick if I understand it, is to pull the upper edge off of the locking tab behind the brass trim piece. And the way to do that is to push upward on the brass trim while at the same time pulling the upper edge of the brass trim outward toward you. Seems like some sort of thin metalic object with a small catch at the end would be helpful to get behind the trim piece to pull it forward. How was the putty knife able to pull the trim forward? Or does the trim just pop off of the tab behind it when you push up? I will have to try this on on one of my 7's
Thanks!
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Vacuum tubes are used in Wisconsin to help heat your house. New Web Site under developement ME http://AntiqueTvGuy.com |
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#5
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Bob,
The trim floats out past the outer edge of those retainers. So you can pull it forward with the putty knife at the end. At that point I was able to get a finger behind trim end and then move the putty knife closer to the first tab. You need to slowly work it off one tab at time, working inward from each end. Pictures below show how the U trim hangs on the retainers. The bottom edge of the trim wraps around the back of the retainer, so I don't see how you could slip the bottom edge off first. The right picture is an upside down view of the bottom side. Last edited by Kevin Kuehn; 08-26-2011 at 02:48 PM. |
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#6
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Kevin,
Is the upper back edge of the trim just sitting on top of the metal retainer, or is the back edge of the trim 'Hooked" into that tab which is sticking out of the glass retainer? If it is NOT hooked into the little tab, what do you suppose the purpose of that tab is? That is the part that confuses me. I gather that the brass trim is Not hooked into the little tab, but just sort of snaps over the glass retainer assembly in sort of a "force fit"??????
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Vacuum tubes are used in Wisconsin to help heat your house. New Web Site under developement ME http://AntiqueTvGuy.com |
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#7
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Quote:
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#8
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Sorry, had those two last pictures reversed. Fixed now.
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