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#16
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An old Zenith engineer once told me that Admiral needed the
color fidelity pot to compensate for the color temperature drift caused by the 6LE8 demodulator tube.This tube is a high level demodulator with built in matrixing.They were trying to copy Zenith's scheme of high level demodulation to save money by using less tubes but could not use the sheet beam demodulator tubes that Zenith used.I guess Zenith had a patent on that circuit.Motorola also used the 6LE8 but they decided to call the pot the tint control.I think the proper way to adjust the color fidelity is to turn the color intensity all the way down for a b&w picture. Then adjust color fidelity for the best grey scale.You may also want to install a fresh 6LE8 because this tube is pushed kinda hard in these sets. Swanson |
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#17
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got the set up and running last night. It has a pretty good picture, altho the picture tube has a weak gun. I don't have my rejuvinator anymore, so I will have to make do. All functions seem to work pretty good on this set and I am impressed! I will post a screen shot tonight.
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#18
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You can borrow mine as long as you promise to send it back when you're done
__________________
"Restoring a tube TV is like going to war. A color one is like a land war in Asia." |
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#19
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really?!? kewl
I would send it back. I'm only used to B&K and the RCA one I sold to Doug. Is it easy to use? Also..... As I mentioned in an earlier post, the bakelite base on the tube has cracks in it. Does that make the tube unstable if I try to take the socket off? I would hate to have it implode in my face.
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#20
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No, Just be sure to hold the plug by the bakelite when pulling the socket off. You dont want any trouble with broken wires!
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| Audiokarma |
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#21
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Last edited by andy; 12-08-2021 at 04:23 PM. |
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#22
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Color fidelity control in different sets
Magnavox, in the mid-1960s, used a circuit it called "Chromatone" in its high-end sets of the period (e. g. their three-way color theatre sets) to inject one soft color into the background of a black-and-white picture, not enough to ruin it, just enough to add a touch of warmth to it. The color injected could be varied from, IIRC, blue to close to brown by means of a control on the front panel. Another manufacturer, whose name escapes me as I write this, put a switch on its sets it referred to as a "sepia switch" to achieve the same results. Admiral's "color fidelity" control, again IIRC, worked on the same principle as the Magnavox system. Zenith, however, did not, to the best of my knowledge, have any kind of monochrome enhancement systems in any of its sets, from the earliest roundies through its 1980s production (before GS bought them out in the early '90s).
These b&w picture enhancement controls were sometimes confusing to adjust, so a lot of set owners would just put them at midrange and forget them. Since most of today's network programming is in color, it is probably just as well to leave any color fidelity or other b&w picture controls at that position as well if you are watching modern programming on a very old set (such as jstout66's Admiral) with any kind of monochrome enhancement.
__________________
Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
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