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#1
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GE M112YVY B&W Portable
Well, it's started.
I finally got an old TV, so the collection has begun. I was at a flea market and found an 11 inch GE M112YVY B&W portable from 1963-64, and a 1962 GE T270A AM/FM radio at the same booth. Got it for $5.00. Couldn't resist, it was just a GE day. I was wanting an early 60's GE table radio like that, and this one is original and sounds great. The cabinet needs some help though. The TV is in great condition on the outside, just dirty and the knobs are a little worn. However, the cheater cord is missing. Now, before any of you start laughing at my little set, I already know it isn't the greatest in the world. They were made to be cheap. But, it is a tube set and I figured it will be a decent learning experience. If I screw it up, nothing much lost in money or collectible status. So, where do I start? I guess the first thing is to find a cord. I did open it up and clean out the dust. Should I power it up, or something else first? |
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#2
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I opened it up and cleaned/blew out a lot of dust. The tubes/compactrons look ok. CRT neck looks ok, but I can't see a getter. No blown caps or resistors. Flyback seems ok. Everything is sure compact on these.
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#3
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Do you have a variac or other device to bring voltage up slowly? If so, use that, otherwise I would just power it up and see what it does. Worst that could happen is that a cap will blow.
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Bryan |
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#4
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I'm not laughing, I think those are neat little sets. I tried to snag one in the early days of eBay but didn't make it.
It's packed full inside, it must be a hotbox with all those Compactrons running. I would rig up a cord and just plug it in, I think there's a decent chance it'll work, at least somewhat. |
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#5
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On second thought you might want to change out the .1 ceramic cap near the flyback, I hear they go bang pretty loudly.
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| Audiokarma |
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#6
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I find that chassis design fascinating....I've never seen a monochrome set with such a compact, minimalistic chassis before.
__________________
Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
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#7
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Quote:
The only electrolytics are the four section can and one 100mf 10v on the other board. There are about a dozen molded paper caps and the majority are ceramic. If the boards can be taken off without too much trouble it should be pretty easy to re-cap. Quote:
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#8
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A film cap of the right values will replace that white ceramic tube just fine.
__________________
Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
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#9
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Quote:
Either of these should work. http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/...f9tZEGuYOX8%3d http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/...52b5qMyUU8w%3d |
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#10
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Quote:
There doesn't appear to be any room for a uhf tuner. I had one of those, but I scrapped it. The CRT has a strange plastic film on it, for implosion protection. The set was beat up and dirty and the film was discolored and scratched. The speaker and the handle was probably the most costly parts in it. I replaced a broken handle on a box fan, with the handle from that set.
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| Audiokarma |
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#11
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There was a UHF version of that set. I hade one many years ago. It is an interesting set but rather low end like most GE stuff from that era. It also uses a weird 11 inch picture tube when most other sets are 12 inch. For daily use I would recommend a Zenith from the same time period, night and day difference in quality.
I will be interested to know if that GE works or not.
__________________
Just look at those channels whiz on by. - Fred Sanford |
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#12
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Quote:
I think the CRT was a tension band and was all channel. IIRC, the chassis was simular to the 12" models. This set used a 23Z9, where the model shown used a 17JZ8. Other minor differences. |
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#13
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According to the Sams, GE used this chassis on a bunch of differnt models. Here is an ad from 1964 for some of them: http://books.google.com/books?id=80c...201963&f=false Only $99.95. Says there is a lifetime warranty on the circuit boards. Do think they would still honor that?
The UHF tuner was separate and this set doesn't have it, although there is a UHF position on the dial. Apparently it was optional according to the ad. Sams has the diagram for the UHF tuner, but no picture of it, so I'm not sure how it was installed. It is very light weight for a tv of that era. The case is surprisingly not polystyrene, but probably polypropelyne. Very durable and still very flexible. Other nods to economy were series strung filaments and no focus control. |
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#14
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That is a very collectible TV. I worked on at least two for neighbors, one had a red case and the other white, like yours. Neither one had UHF.
We had a rural appliance dealer that sold only GE, so it must have been an irresistable bargain to get a novelty TV for $100 in those days. Nobody shopped around then. I don't remember much being wrong with them but I did buy a Sams (set 695?) for the first one because I was baffled by the sheer simplicity of it, I was also 13 and fixed both, so it had to be easy issues, DC power supply and the usual tuner cleaning, IIRC.
__________________
"When resistors increase in value, they're worthless" -Dave G Last edited by DavGoodlin; 06-10-2013 at 11:06 AM. |
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#15
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I found an old printer cord that almost fit. What do you know, the tv needs a polarized plug! One pin is larger than the other. So, I spread out one side and traced it to the plug and now it's polarized.
I thought I should make sure the CRT was still good before I spent my effort to recap it. I don't have a variac, but decided to press my luck and fire it up anyway. It works! Well, for a little bit anyway, the pictures are below. The controls are very touchy, so a good dose of cleaner might help. Got the picture to come in pretty decent. Things are a little distorted and the left side has a vertical strip that is a little darker, but doesn't show up in the pictures very well. The sound has a light hum. It sure does heat up! I had it on channel 3 and tried to change it to see if channel 4 worked. When I did I couldn't get a clear picture on 4 or 3 again (last photo). At least I know the CRT is good and I made an order with Mouser for parts. I'll try taking the tuner apart and cleaning it really well. The plastic screen face had some light scratches. I used Turtle Wax on it and they came out really well, except for one small V shape scratch. After I recap and do the final cleaning I might try a little rubbing compound and buff it out. |
| Audiokarma |
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