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#1
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Found a Zenith....
...now how to get the chassis out without breaking it. It's a '66 model N724 I picked up for $5. Anybody got any suggestions? It's the dial assembly that's preventing me from sliding the chassis out...
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#2
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I had one of those and the dial has a round shaft gripper with a tension ring.
If you pull on the tuning wheel from the back, it will pop off. When you put it back together, make sure you tune it to a station of known frequency, in the middle of the band, then align the dial/pointer before pushing it back together. Looks in fine condition and I bet the tubes are all OK. One of the last tube radios? Edit: This radio, like many from the mid-60's had tension rings with a set of ears that prevented knobs from being pulled off completely, exposing a metal shaft that was possibly energized with line voltage.
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"When resistors increase in value, they're worthless" -Dave G Last edited by DavGoodlin; 08-27-2013 at 12:29 PM. Reason: Knob retainers |
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#3
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Quote:
The 12DT8 was dead, as the radio was probably only used on AM. It appears the radio was repaired once, sometime in the late 70's. The 35C5 was replaced and they did use a Zenith branded replacement. |
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#4
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Those were good little radios that rarely gave trouble. Zenith still made a version of this set through '69 (Z-line); but, '69 was the end of the line for Zenith tube radios. I have a similar '69 clock version of this set with a busted output tube socket (likely a result of a cheap socket combined with high hours).
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http://www.youtube.com/user/radiotvphononut |
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#5
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Many of those mid to late '60s models that were on the cheaper end, you just can't fix. I remember running into an Airline or Sylvania or something where the circuit board was glued in to the radio, and the filter can was mounted to the board in such a way that after many years of heat, the whole darn thing just crumbled.
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"Restoring a tube TV is like going to war. A color one is like a land war in Asia." |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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#7
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#8
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#9
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#10
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Cool! I was gonna add "what does S&H mean on the tube" in my last post. You answered my question before I asked--thank you deisel...you mind reader, you.
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| Audiokarma |
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#11
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I'll have to order some 12DT8's. I'm out!
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#12
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Surprise, Surprise, It's already broken! Apparently, somebody had already tried to remove the chassis and damaged the case.
What I thought was a loose screw rattling inside was bits of plastic. The am/fm dial popped off just like DavGoodlin said...easy. I may be able to salvage this case with some superglue since one of the plastic screw bushings is a clean break from the rest of the case. Should I replace any of the ceramic caps or just the tubulars and the electrolytic can?
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