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#1
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Soviet console
Looking on a Russian old electronics site, I found this:
http://www.rw6ase.narod.ru/v/viguli/viguli59.html It had an 35 cm (14") screen, F.M. radio, record-player (pick-up). It had 62 kgs, a power consumption of 160 W on tv and 100 W on radio. The price was 420 rubles (a Soviet worker would probably had an imcoming about 20-30 rubles per month... ). |
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#2
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In Soviet Russia, TV watches you?
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various stuff |
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#3
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Back during the Cold War, we heard all about evil godless communism, and that their color TVs only had red phospers...
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#4
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#5
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Additional on the Soviet-era Entertainment Center
Here’s an English translation of the Soviet-era entertainment center referenced by Telecolor. This translation is courtesy of a colleague of mine at the office, Ms. Victoria Smith…
Combined set (TV-radio) “Zhiguli-59” Manufacturer: Kuibyshev Plant “Ekzun” (Ekzun = “Screen”) Model Year: 1959 TV-radio “Zhiguli-59” is a floor combined set which consists of 3rd class TV based on a 35LKB2 kinescope receiving five TV channels with FM reception. At the beginning of 1960, reception was for 12 TV channels without FM reception. FM reception was now in a 2nd class radio receiver. The set also has a 2nd class record player. The TV has a sensitivity of 200mV. Picture size is 220 X 290mm. TV power consumption is 160 watts, in other uses 100 watts. Sound is reproduced via four speakers in the front and on the sides. The weight is 62kg. Price was 420 rubles. Pictures of the modernized TV-radio were sent by Yegor from Bryansk City. Last edited by John Pinckney; 06-20-2007 at 08:28 PM. Reason: Typo caught! |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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My old electronics tech. professor found this quote in the local newspaper and posted it on his office door. I think it came from national columnist L.M. Boyd:
Quote:
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#7
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Only when their motors ran hot.
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tvontheporch.com |
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#8
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I seem to recall that a "nationally well-known consumer magazaine" (Which is quick to sue whenever they're quoted from...) said much the same thing back in the 1980's about a line of color sets made in the U.S.A.
"My old electronics tech. professor found this quote in the local newspaper and posted it on his office door. I think it came from national columnist L.M. Boyd:" Quote:Soviet televisions reportedly have a tendency to catch on fiire. Last edited by John Pinckney; 06-19-2007 at 09:18 PM. Reason: Style... |
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#9
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Ees strongk, like Trectorh...
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Benevolent Despot |
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#10
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Many years ago, I 've heard that soviet TVs were designed to explode, if an specific signal was sent for them, a signal that was suposed to be sent from somewhere inside the USSR... this exploding device inside the sets was suposed to be used in case NATO soldiers invaded the territory of the USSR. If they entered houses and apartments the communist government would send the signal for the sets to explode, killing the enemy soldiers.
I don't know if such a device actually went into production, but I am sure as hell that they at least considered the idea. |
| Audiokarma |
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#11
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Quote:
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#12
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RW6ASE is apparently the ham radio call sign of the site's owner. It is interesting how things come out when you use a Web site to translate from Russian to English. One page says he "collects lamp tape recorders and radioreceivers". A "lamp tape recorder" would probably be a VCR, I expect.
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#13
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And in the western world, the red guns were the first guns which became bad due to the low senitive red phosphors...
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#14
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And you really think this is funny?
Yeah, Russians still drink vodka and play balalaika all day long, and there are bears on the streets of Moscow. Wake up! This is 2007, not 1977. And average worker's salary was (at that time) about 100-150 roubles a month. And Soviet TVs (as well as stereos and such) where very reliable (mostly). Which doesn't apply to my old RCA TV which spent most of it's life in a repair shop.
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#15
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Quote:
This was not going in the direction of current politics until your post, so can we please keep it that way? |
| Audiokarma |
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