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#16
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As said a Zenith is the best tube color set to deal with.
With the steel chassis & hand wiring they just hold up best. Even in the 70's we used to get RCA's & others that the PCB & wiring was dried to a crisp. Never seen a Zenith dried up. We used to buy 6GH8's by the gross about 3 times a year from Zenith for 90% off. Nothin but problems no matter what brand. With RCA's you also got to watch the tube sockets, changed tons especially the pair up front. 5GH8's were used in that first all tube 19" plastic RCA. I despised that chassis, gave a nice pix but always needed an arm full of tubes for the little problems. Too much heat I suppose. So try a Zenith, at least when it craps out it wont turn to dust working on it. & add a fan to anything.......... 73 Zeno
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#17
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...
Last edited by andy; 12-05-2021 at 07:53 PM. |
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#18
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I have had the best luck with Zenith sets, particularly their early 70's hybrids. I used to like to work on the RCA's of that era, but they never seemed to be quite as dependable.
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#19
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I too like the color circuits of RCA's better, and like to work on them more (the pcb if not toasted is just easier to replace parts than the zenith).
My favorite sets to work on are the vertical chassis RCAs like the 7 and the 9. |
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#20
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Quote:
My CTC-36, well, it's just a problem child. Stinks too, because I love the damn thing. Of course, for the main watcher in the living room is a 32" HD flat panel. Women, yanno?
__________________
"Restoring a tube TV is like going to war. A color one is like a land war in Asia." |
| Audiokarma |
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#21
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I read, or heard, likely here, that Cdr. Eugene F. McDonald, Jr, the Wheel Horse at Zenith, didn't like television, only reluctantly got into it when he saw how BIG of a market it was gonna be. RCA held most of the patents, he told his engineers not to bring one out til it was RIGHT, & that's why Zenith TVs, even into the color era, often don't require the level of rebuilding the other brands do..Maybe that's BS, but as the owner of a still-performing Porthole, I like to think that's right...
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Benevolent Despot |
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#22
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Quote:
![]() Women and their lack of appreciation for anything other than the newest crap. If I were to marry, mine would have to at least have to accept the presence of all my old stuff and buy all this worthless gadgetry out of her own money, which means I'll probably never marry, haha. |
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#23
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Amazingly enough, my Magnavox has been less problematic then my Zenith. I find that very surprising, considering the Magnavox 19" set my parents had in the 70's was always needing repair.
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#24
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Quote:
. But for watching hockey games and other stuff, she'd rather go with a new set. Tradeoffs, yanno? I will say that she never complains about anything I do or buy. We realize in each other that life is all about doing the things that make you come alive.....and this stuff makes me come alive. For her, it's road trips, good restaurants, and family....so we do that stuff too ![]() Here's a REALLY old shot of one of them, when it was doing duty in my kids' room in a place I lived briefly during a divorce. I ended up getting the house back
__________________
"Restoring a tube TV is like going to war. A color one is like a land war in Asia." |
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#25
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Get a Sony Trinitron. I've had excellent luck with them. We had a KV 7010UA and a KV 1210U both purchased in 1969. Both running well with not one service call until my wife accidentally gave them away in 2006. 37 years without a problem.
I still have my Sony KV 1722 purchased in 1973. Only a very minor purity problem in the upper left corner which is not always visible. No service calls on that one either, 40 years of reliable operation.
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| Audiokarma |
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#26
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Quote:
Guys whose wives force them out of or severely limit their space-taking hobbies, that I have a problem with. Good on you in regards to the house. ![]() My '87 Trinitron has the same sort of problem. Trouble with those though, if any semiconductors go, good luck finding a replacement, they have to be OEM. Last edited by Jon A.; 09-14-2013 at 10:29 AM. |
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#27
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Quote:
With the narrow-deflection CRT and low B+, the deflection tubes were not stressed near as much as in regular sets. The resultant cooler running seemed to be the biggest factor influencing the Portacolors' longevity. |
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#28
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I am much newer to the TV repairing game than most of you, and I always think its funny when somebody asks me what is the best TV to buy. I tell them I never see the good ones, so I wouldn't know! LOL. I can tell you which ones are crap, and which ones are easy to fix, but if I've never heard of it, that's a good start
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#29
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I have had good luck with portacolors. only one that really got me was one with an open pot in the color demod circuit, just jumped a resistor from the center lead. had one with a flacky cap in the vert both other than that pretty much prob free.
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#30
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Is that one you got from me still intermittently going off like a firecracker?
__________________
"Restoring a tube TV is like going to war. A color one is like a land war in Asia." |
| Audiokarma |
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