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#1
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Another Zenith Porthole
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#2
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That is a 16 inch set, 1950 model.
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#3
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Very Nice!
One thing for sure: The shipping's gonna cost. Those sets--even as lowly 12" table models are extremely heavy--AMHIK. I remember back about 25 years ago looking at one very similar model in someone's attic. I went to the address to look at an old Zenith floor model set, and a man opened the door to the ding of the bell. He glowered down at me from a height of about 6'5", and looked like any of the Chicago Bears could be his pipsqueak younger brother. Put some more hair on him and call him a gorilla. He even groaned and grumbled with each breath like the ape bouncer in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" He gruffly beckoned me in, and I followed him to the second floor of his rambling old Victorian, then the third floor, then up a winding stair into the attic, an ooky stair that felt like it was going to give way at any moment under this guy's massive AVDP. I was glad I had a flashlight on me as I peered at this set in a back corner of the attic. I mumbled something about needing an outlet to plug the set in and see what it would do. He said "There's an extension cord end run up from below over there." And before I could offer to help he stooped down and placed the palms of his hands flat on each side of the cabinet of the heavy old set, and lifted it high off the floor and carried it closer to the power source as if it were made of styrofoam, and gently placed it down. (Yoiks!) He claimed that the set worked OK a few years ago, but only pulled in the local station. Being "Dangerous Dave" I plugged it in and turned it on....After I twiddled the various knobs a bit to compensate for corrosion the set actually produced a reasonably bright raster. But no snow, no sound, anon a distinct smell that made me shut things down quickly. Obvious re-cap job on deck here.... I gave the guy some figures that were well out of the range he cared to spend. He paid me some cash for my troubles, and that's the last I saw of the set. Last edited by Old1625; 04-20-2009 at 04:14 PM. |
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#4
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I'll betcha my '49 Mayflower 10" weighs 20pounds more than my 1950 16" console porthole. That Mayflower is a brute!
Terry |
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#5
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I wonder what they dumped all over this set to make it look nice?
You can see two droplets of something, looks like Coke or creosote, on either side of the Zenith emblem. Last edited by John Marinello; 04-20-2009 at 07:43 PM. |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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Very interesting. Good eye John. It looks kinda like oil too.
__________________
My TV page and YouTube channel Kyocera R-661, Yamaha RX-V2200 National Panasonic SA-5800 Sansui 1000a, 1000, SAX-200, 5050, 9090DB, 881, SR-636, SC-3000, AT-20 Pioneer SX-939, ER-420, SM-B201 Motorola SK77W-2Z tube console McIntosh MC2205, C26 |
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#7
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That's probably the tar from all those 1950's Luckys.
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#8
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Are you sure it's not a shadow?
John |
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#9
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I agree John....it looks like a shadow. The camera was angled up when the flash went off and it looks like it cast a shadow.
Bob |
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#10
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Not a shadow. That is a machined flat surface there.
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| Audiokarma |
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#11
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I went back and looked at the other photos. You're right, the feature is still there when viewed at different angles.
John |
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#12
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I think they rubbed it down with some Restore-A-Finish or some stain and they didn't quite get it all off.
The finish looks a little too fresh & wet to me. |
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#13
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They definitely did something to it, I wouldn't buy without seeing it in person first.
__________________
My TV page and YouTube channel Kyocera R-661, Yamaha RX-V2200 National Panasonic SA-5800 Sansui 1000a, 1000, SAX-200, 5050, 9090DB, 881, SR-636, SC-3000, AT-20 Pioneer SX-939, ER-420, SM-B201 Motorola SK77W-2Z tube console McIntosh MC2205, C26 |
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