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#16
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"Lay" people always think if its got Tooobs, it is 1) Ancient, & therefore 2) VERY valuable. That's why you see those 1950s era Zenith radios that they must have made a gazillion of, priced at $50 & up in Antique Stores...
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Benevolent Despot |
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#17
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My uncle had a portacolor that he was going to give me back about 5 years ago. I remember that it was an early 70's model and looks like the second picture on the this thread. Actually I think it's identical. It had a hole burned into the top from what he told be an incence burned down and melted it. He put it in the garage, and still to this day cannot find it. He told me to come over and try to see if I can find it up in the attic. After seeing these two portacolors, I might just go up and look for it now. It worked and had a nice bright CRT.
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Honey, turn on the tv.. I'm cold! |
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#18
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I've always liked the little porta colors and I think I have around 20 or so of them of all years except a 1966 model and I'm still looking for one. Just last Saturday at an estate sale I purchased a early good working SS porta color for $2.50. They also had an Admiral Solar Color console for the same price (25" console) with all the hang tags and owners manual still unopened stapled to the back but I had no room for it. The estate was the owner of House-Hasson Hardware company which was the Admiral distributorship for this area in Tennessee. But he did have this little GE TV!
The porta colors rarely have a bad CRT and you can always fix them.
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julian Last edited by julianburke; 07-15-2010 at 12:01 PM. |
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#19
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Here's my PC-II from 1973. Have no idea what wrong with it yet - was found with the hatch off.
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#20
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Quote:
Cheers,
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Brian USN RET 22YRS (Avionics/Cal) CET-Consumer Repair and Avionics ('88) "Capacitor Cosmetologist since '79" When fuses go to work, they quit! |
| Audiokarma |
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#21
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I just got a Portacolor II from '73 earlier this week. It's gonna need some work. The horizontal won't lock and the audio is motorboating, so I'm gonna have to change some caps.
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Dumont-First with the finest in television. |
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#22
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I've always loved them and have been saving them for the last 20 years when found in a thrift store, yard sale or in the trash. On day I went to the dump facility and a Goodwill truck came and was dumping fairly good stuff (like they always do) and the guy emptying the truck pulled out a little SS Portacolor and set it down with the rest of the stuff so I sprang into action and put it in my truck. It was a nice one too and later at home found it to be in perfect working condition. Up in Ohio I found two tube sets in one day at different locations! I have quite a pile of them in the warehouse!
BTW, I am still looking for the early one made in 1966.
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julian Last edited by julianburke; 12-11-2011 at 08:05 PM. |
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#23
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The 1966 Porta-color had the chassis HB, which was a GE original. Unlike the rest of thier color sets for 1966. The big brother was the CB which had either a 21" round, 23EGP22? or a 25AP22?. My fact'ry manuals refers to this RCA-clone trio as CB-21, CB-23 or CB-25. Does anybody know if a 19" GE color set was made that year?
Edit: D'oh The GE CB chassis was not a clone as pointed out below-thanks. It was GE transitioning to compactron tubes. BTW- I don't even respond to "vintage TV" any more in CL or EB ads, the term is now applied to anything with a CRT!!! Last edited by DavGoodlin; 01-17-2012 at 02:52 PM. Reason: factual error |
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#24
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Quote:
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#25
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I have a little UK market PAL S. Kuba portable set from 1969 in storage. I have never been inside it as it never get used but is in working condition. Even new these things never produced a great picture due to the low res tube and simple PAL decoder.
I have often wondered if it is a Portacolor clone? If it is it will be the only US Colour set to ever reach the UK market! Must pull it from storage soon and have a look?
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| Audiokarma |
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#26
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Quote:
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#27
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The VHF tuner and one control appear to be missing on this set. Is Europe's television system all UHF, with no need for VHF tuning in sets marketed there? Also, which control is missing on this set? Can't be one of the color controls, unless this set had a color-fidelity control like the ones on certain brands of US televisions of the 1960s-'70s.
Edit: I took another look at the set's control panel and saw a legend, "UHF-VHF", above the missing control's mounting hole. Could certain models of this set have had a tuning range switch to select UHF and VHF tuners, for areas that may still have had VHF TV stations? I am thinking that there may have been certain models of this set which had both tuners, for use in areas with stations in both tuning ranges. However, I also wonder why there would have had to be a manual switch on the front of the set for VHF-UHF tuner switching. American NTSC analog TVs had a switch on the VHF tuner that activated the UHF tuner when the former was set to "UHF" or "U", the position between channels 2 and 13. Did this idea never occur to European TV manufacturers, or was there a law in Europe that for some reason prohibited such an arrangement, meaning of course that a manual range switch on the front of the set was mandatory? If the latter, I can't imagine why such a law would even be necessary. The VHF/UHF tuner switching arrangement on American and Canadian NTSC CRT TVs made more sense, IMO. I'm surprised it did not become a worldwide standard long before Europe and most of the rest of the world switched to DTV.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. Last edited by Jeffhs; 01-15-2012 at 11:53 AM. |
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#28
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I think Britain quit using VHF when they discontinued 405 line transmitting. I think that set has a VHF tuner, but they covered it. IIRC, Sony did the same thing with their British KV1200's. This is what keeps this hobby interesting.
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#29
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Perhaps the location of the "tint" control is covered in this set, as the PAL transmission scheme (which included phase reversal on alternate lines) did not require adjustment of tint.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PAL jr Last edited by jr_tech; 01-15-2012 at 12:40 PM. Reason: add quote, link |
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#30
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Europe standardised on a 625 line UHF / VHF system in the early 60s for colour broadcasts, and that particular Kuba portable was a UK model introduced before full colour switchover in 1969. Before that UK colour and mono sets had to be able to pick up the national channels on VHF at 405 lines. The Kuba was a German set and as in the rest of europe Colour was broadcast at 625 lines on UHF and VHF. The early UK Kuba had a VHF and a UHF tuner and a complicated switch to go between! that also had to change the scan from 625 to 405 lines The UK Kuba was rather funny as in 1969, the UK supplier the rental company, Granada just set the switch to UHF, pulled off the knob and the VHF tuning dial and covered the holes after the switchover!! (that switching was a source of many problems!). That set has a tint control because it used a simplified PAL S decoder where the colour would drift (as in NTSC), From my experience with the Hibrid Kuba it drifted a lot! All larger sets had full PAL decoders and had no colour drift so it really was not acceptable to keep having to operate a tint control!
VHF tuners in the UK also used all 13 channels! London BBC was always on channel 1! I know all this because my brother was an engineer for Granada! He Hated the Kubas ( as did most of the people who rented them!). Last edited by colin4014; 01-15-2012 at 02:04 PM. |
| Audiokarma |
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