I actually asked the lady when I purchased it from her. Supposedly her husband’s ex wife was a hoarder and they had a bad habit of buying things that were marked down for clearance they never planned on using. They actually had a lot of new in box stuff 2 other CRT’s and lots of brand new audio equipment they even had a brand new Atari 2600 sealed but the lady said her son wanted to keep that I don’t blame him. 😂
That set brings back memories for me. It was the family tv for many years. Unfortunately it developed a unusual problem. The entire screen would go blue but you could still kinda see the picture
Hey all still don’t know what the headphone looking thing was so if you have any idea I’d love to know 5:00.Someone on Reddit reached out saying they owned one when they were a teenager and said it likely came out in the mid 80s. Thanks for checking this video out I have a lot of cool content planned so if interested hit that subscribe button. Thank You 💯
Your mystery accessories are an earphone and a 75ohm to 300ohm balun used for connecting the 75ohm coax to eithet a 300ohm set of rabbit ears or dipole ot yagi antenna on the roof or tower.
Korean built discount store TV. The manufacturer, KTV Global, Corp. is still in business, with factories in Korea, Philippines, and Germany. Most of their stuff is institutional, made for hotels, hospitals, schools, and prisons. Well built for the time, with Japanese parts.
Hey, could you tell me the dimensions of the screen? The width, length and hypotenuse? I was wanting to get one similar but I can’t find the dimensions online.
@@OGDomTheAtariDJ just the screen is what I’d want to know. I’m getting a cling sticker for a crt I’m getting that’s also a 19in Ktv. But I need to know the screen size and I won’t be back home from college till the weekend.
Ear plug speaker, it's mono. Not stereo. The TV is probably accepts NTSC signals. Will not work on ASTC signals. Most stations no longer transmit NTSC anymore. But Atari 2600's will work on it, the old VHS machines will work on it. I remember playing Atari in my teens, your talking the 1970's. Before Xbox/SONY PlayStation/Nintendo's.
Here's the question: Who buys expensive electronics and then never takes it out of the box for FOURTY YEARS!? Did they forget about it?
I actually asked the lady when I purchased it from her. Supposedly her husband’s ex wife was a hoarder and they had a bad habit of buying things that were marked down for clearance they never planned on using. They actually had a lot of new in box stuff 2 other CRT’s and lots of brand new audio equipment they even had a brand new Atari 2600 sealed but the lady said her son wanted to keep that I don’t blame him. 😂
OMG..I couldn't have taken it out..I would've wanted to put away for another 20 years 😂
That set brings back memories for me. It was the family tv for many years. Unfortunately it developed a unusual problem. The entire screen would go blue but you could still kinda see the picture
Hey all still don’t know what the headphone looking thing was so if you have any idea I’d love to know 5:00.Someone on Reddit reached out saying they owned one when they were a teenager and said it likely came out in the mid 80s. Thanks for checking this video out I have a lot of cool content planned so if interested hit that subscribe button. Thank You 💯
It's an earphone. One channel. Mono.
It's an earphone. Single mono headphone. Common in those days.
@@sambaker3233Theoretically if I plugged in modern set of wired headphones would they play in stereo or just mono?
That black piece allows you to use an antenna which plugs into cable input of the TV .
@@OGDomTheAtariDJ it would be mono.
Your mystery accessories are an earphone and a 75ohm to 300ohm balun used for connecting the 75ohm coax to eithet a 300ohm set of rabbit ears or dipole ot yagi antenna on the roof or tower.
I have an Apple CRT I need to unbox. Thanks for creating this video!
Korean built discount store TV. The manufacturer, KTV Global, Corp. is still in business, with factories in Korea, Philippines, and Germany. Most of their stuff is institutional, made for hotels, hospitals, schools, and prisons. Well built for the time, with Japanese parts.
Thank you I wasn’t able to find much of any info other then some other TV’s listed online
Moly I spoiled with s-vid+up. When my Model 1 Genesis arrived I could only test then in RF in Channel 3 n boy was that a glory to see again
Nice tv
My dad had this tv when he was younger so probably 1970s or early 1980s
UPDATE: I’ve checked the back of the tv and it’s alot newer than i previously thought the tv was manufactured in September of 1989.
I recall seeing a Magicstripe CRT TV on Facebook marketplace and the brand name was "Hi Tech" but it was indeed made by KTV.
I got this one from facebook marketplace Best place to find old cool stuff !!
They started making them in 1982 and stopped in 1987
no
@@thisisrob8750 look it up on the web ..yes
Thay used to have old tvs back in day 😂😂😊😊
Why not hook a tv converter box to it and do a channel scan?
I shoulda
Did you look on the back of the tv where the serial # is? Usually has the manufacturer date stamp on it.
Will check thank you
September 1989
❤❤❤❤❤
The Philips crt tv in the back of the video was my grandparent's old tv before they got rid of it.
That’s my composite Set it’s awesome!
You have in your hands a relic of human engineering, I hope you take good care of that "old" television.
Look on the back of the tv it should be there
Just checked Manufactured in September 1989. Thanks I wouldn’t of known to check there.
Is that WVOA channel 2 that is on the tv?
Nah it’s radio fm NJ 101.5
Watching this made me feel ancient.💀
Hey, could you tell me the dimensions of the screen? The width, length and hypotenuse? I was wanting to get one similar but I can’t find the dimensions online.
You want the measurements of the entire tv or just the screen
Ik it’s 19 inches the screen but if you want the exact measurements I could do that after I leave work
@@OGDomTheAtariDJ just the screen is what I’d want to know. I’m getting a cling sticker for a crt I’m getting that’s also a 19in Ktv. But I need to know the screen size and I won’t be back home from college till the weekend.
@@noahreese2455 No problem I believe the screen sticks out about an inch but I’ll measure and tell you later
@@OGDomTheAtariDJ thank you so very much. Maybe I’ll make a video on it when I get it in and you can see what I’m planning.
Those headphones are from 1970 to 1980 style
Is the new phone
This video was recorded on an iPhone XR I’ve recently upgraded to the iPhone 15
u want to sell it?
Nah I’m keeping it. That thing is awesome
Moist
Ear plug speaker, it's mono. Not stereo. The TV is probably accepts NTSC signals. Will not work on ASTC signals. Most stations no longer transmit NTSC anymore. But Atari 2600's will work on it, the old VHS machines will work on it. I remember playing Atari in my teens, your talking the 1970's. Before Xbox/SONY PlayStation/Nintendo's.
Unless you get a DAC which converts Digital signals to Analog signals
The OG Nintendo and Super Nintendo, Sega and Sega Genusis, and Atari Jaguar will work on this. I had a 14" Toshiba TV with similar specs.
This tv rocks for 2600 games I mostly use it for older systems from the late 70s early 80s