Shango, if you could teach electronics, you should. You have a natural ability. I'm no where competent as you are, but from watching your videos, I have already learned so much. Thank you so much for posting these videos. They are an inspiration! By the way, I love definitely love the sarcasm in your videos!
Those postwar AA5 radios were inexpensive and durable, and despite their reputation as low-end receivers, as long as you put in replacement components of the same values as the originals, they'll work quite solidly and reliably! It's amazing to me that they dominated the home receiver market for 35 years!
I love old tube radios ,when they are restored ,I love how you can get new life out of them I like how tubes sound I bet newer radio don't last as long ,or sound as good.
Just purchased one of these, waiting for delivery. Refrigerator white, 1950-completely re-capped, [& etc]. $ 80.oo. Looks fantastic. Glad to hear you talk about H.D.radio. I had questions.
Hi shango: I don't know what you're doing, or even what you're saying half the time, but I enjoy watching your channel. The best part is watching these pieces of history being brought back to life. Thank you!
Craig...i sure do..was living in Moore County, NC..they tried it there...two huge towers..millions spent to convert previous AM station office and the guy went bankrupt..you are the only person i have read that noted it...Rich.
Jason Uzak Last night, I tried my GE AM clock radio and it's still humming like crazy, because it was from 1951, but I trying DXing the stations at night and everything comes in well. 1010 WINS comes in very well, other stations from other states comes in well around night fall, and I don't hear an IBOC interferences at all since most of the IBOC's had pulled the plug, because HD radio on AM is a huge failure, so they used it for FM.
Any videos of mines and the desert with ham radios and abandoned places that's video was awesome the old TV's you found and one radio from the desert - I like the min videos and how you explorer
Don't need HD radio. These older radios can outperform the newest radios it seems. I have an early 1970's Zenith Circle of Sound clock radio that I use when I'm at home visiting family. That radio picks up a station in my home town 280 miles away (AM) very clearly with minimal background noise. My car doesn't even pick it up as good!
By putting the caps on the outside I wonder if you made the IF stage into a regenerative amplifier. I have a Heathkit shortwave radio which has adjustable feedback around the whole IF strip for its BFO.
GE also made the model 535, an AA6 (6 tube) clock radio. Note that shango066's radio is designated to be a "radio alarm clock." The model 535 was a "radio clock". In the early days of adding an electric alarm clock to a radio, providing the "wake to music" feature, apparently the industry hadn't settled on the name "clock radio" (making "clock" the adjective, instead of "radio"), which we use today. The GE model 535 was similar. It did not have the third section in the variable tuning capacitor, which some AA6 radios had. I acquired a hand me down GE model 535 when I was in my early teens, repaired it, and kept it running until I graduated from college. I am quite sure that it suffered silver mica disease. I didn't know what was going on, so, when all else had failed, I replaced the IF transformers with those from a junk radio and got my model 535 running again. Briefly in the video at about 5:21, we see that the B+ feeds to a tap on the audio output transformer primary. One primary winding lead goes to the plate of the audio output tube. The other goes to a 1K resistor and from it to the second filter capacitor, providing B+ for the other tubes. The DC in the two sections of the primary provide partially cancelling DC magnetic flux, allowing GE to use a physically smaller audio output transformer. (Too much DC magnetic flux will saturate the core. Designers use a core with an air gap and also use enough metal to handle the flux.) The downside of this strategy is that some of the output signal power is delivered to the 1K resistor instead of the speaker. If the audio output transformer requires replacement and you only have a transformer without a tap (scavenged from another radio), tie the tap connection and the 1K resistor connection together.
hi shango nice job the same way you did the coil cap i used in win i made my if cans but you work with tube set i made many of solid state but realy tube are fun and so simply
710 WOR here in NYC shut off HD Radio a while ago, ironic as that was the only AM station I could consistantly lock and listen to in HD. I also hear that WCBS 880 turns it off during their Yankees game broadcasts, I hope it goes away forever as it kills any chance of DXing WLS 890 here. Despite being a clear channel, I rarely can get a lock on its HD signal 30 miles from their transmitter. HD Radio will likely stick around on FM, it seems to work fine there.
FM stations have a much wider bandwidth to start with, and a larger separation between each station then on AM broadcasts, not to mention the much shorter range, so interference isn't as much of an issue as with AM. Even before the H.D fiasco started FM stations used their sidebands to multiplex stereo, SCA, and even Muzak broadcasts.
Well built these radios certainly are! I have several of this particular GE model. Same circuit design, same cabinet shape, but each has a different color cabinet. They are all long overdue to be cleaned up, recapped, realigned, and brought back to life again. Most do have SMD problems, so that will be fixed, too. I'm now inspired to do it, because of this video.
Actually, the metal "donuts" covered a set of 8 "wells" surrounding each of the 7 pin tubes, 7 for connection to the tube pins and an 8th tie point. GE called this their "mechanized chassis." It was a forerunner of the printed circuit board. About 13:48 into the video, shango066 shows a good view from the bottom. Assemblers installed components with leads stuck into the wells. In a later manufacturing step, the chassis was moved over a pool of molten solder with the wells in the solder. Solder soaked up into the wells to provide the solder joint connections. There were also "terminal strips", a set of wells in line, used as connection points. The "donut" and the "terminal strip" covers were added later, preventing objects poked through the back of the radio from contacting the circuitry. Note that some connections were still hand soldered, such as those to the IF transformers and the volume control. The "donuts" were nice for the serviceman. Just place the tube in the hole and twist it until the pins lined up with the holes in the socket, then push down into place. GE also used the "mechanized chassis" for some of its 1950s TV sets. The TV set wells were not covered. Zenith appears to have adopted GE's "mechanized chassis" for its TV sets and used it through the 1960s, long after other manufacturers were using printed circuit boards. Zenith called its products "hand crafted." Later, Zenith did adopt printed circuit boards.
I used to be one of those guys that only rebuilt a slug-tuned IF can if I had to, but nowadays I actually consider it a part of radio restoration. If SMD only happened once in awhile I'd take my chances, but most of the radios I get have it or develop it shortly thereafter.
Interesting point and I agree. If switching off analog radio doesn't free up a chunk of bandwidth the fcc will never bother. And since HD radio uses the same chunk of spectrum they would have to not only replace the analog tech they would have to replace HD radio too. I doubt that will happen anytime soon.
One of these got away from me....I was cleaning out a hoarder house and there was a nice Emerson in great shape sitting in the "toss out" pile. Next time back at the house it was gone. Too bad.
Excellent. I assume when your mentioned digital I assume you mean DRM digital radio Mondial. I am a ham radio operator in Northern England & I tapped one of my transceivers 12 kHz IF & I feed that into my PC sound card & use decoding software called DREAM which also displays text. It's possible to have 4 stereo channels or data mix text for news for example & it fits on a single standard AM channel. It's even possible to send a low definition TV picture. I only get DRM on shortwave as on our AM band 531 to 1602 kHz in 9 kHz steps it's just analog. DRM sounds great & with no fading or QSB signal, it stays the same level regardless of signal strength but will start echoing & break up when the signal is below the threshold. Our AM band gets swamped at night with Spanish stations. Very little elsse.
This S.M.Disease: I have an AM/FM Admiral (ca 1948-?-) This sounds like a major operation. I don’t know how to work on them myself. With all new caps in it, would it be worth paying for the repairs?
AM might not sound as good as FM but I love that part of AM! Where I live in canada there is a station that covers the whole province with the one station (yes I know for a fact it is one and it covers from here into Saskatchewan) and they play classic country music so nothing beats classic country music on AM
yo to you best freind and god bless you and i are the same in taste in old set and we both like the fine build ones so thankes for posting and good job one more time
i used to have one of those and it got thrown away a long time ago by my mother because she said it was a fire hazard... she got me a chinese thing... i want one of them again
This radio was manufactured before GE went cheap. It was manufactured in Syracuse, New York at the relatively new "Electronics Park" complex built in the late 1940's.
Shango, I remember some time ago, someone asked if SMD was caused by the electrostatic field across the capacitor. I.e., would NOS IF cans from 50 or 60 years ago have SMD? I don't recall if there was ever an answer. If it's caused by the electrostatic filed, it seems that only the capacitor on the primary side would need to be replaced, since there is next to no voltage across the secondary. In one of your videos, you show sparking under the can. Was that on both sides, or just the primary side?
What do you mean by a "hot radio", shang? It's very sensitive? Particularly to DX (distant stations), or otherwise? Also, why not replace that ratty old speaker, especially since the voice coil /bakelite ring it's mounted on keeps banging into the spider? I'm guessing the freq response of that thing is barely 150 Hz - 4 KHz (i know AM audio is very bandwidth limited, but still...)
I own this very make/model/year radio - my first restore/repair. I inadvertently took apart the clock - I sought to de-solder the wires, simply to move the clock out of the way. Suffice it to say, my work bench is now covered in little gears and levers. Where do I get info on putting this clock back together? Someone, please help me!
we had giant butiful lw/mw/sw transmitter parks here in the netherlands almost all demolished now.,.its sad.. we dont have any am tranmitters anymore here in this country ,other then some small local radio pirats, and one religion channel... no more Hilversum in the air!, Radio Kootwijk gone (lw and sw) Radio netherlands rents transmitter space in england or germany, no more own transmitters here anymore sadly.
Norway is first country to start switching off FM Radio and going over completely to Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) completed nationwide by Dec. 13, 2017. Given the size of the country - with its mountains and fjords - and its small population, it is particularly expensive to offer both FM and digital audio broadcasting, it would save180 million kroner a year, or about $25 million in operation cost.
@@johnschroeder6288 - ok, i was curious en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WPHT (HD 24h\day) Philadelphia =] WMMR nice info . . new to all this, so maybe that's why. = - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1210_AM
Dr. Shango066 requests former patient to come in for checkup. True Touch Tuner - Just - What did you do Really? "Hot" means, what? 'touchy', sensitive, snappy, quick crisp sound? ~ I'm rambling, lol At end of videos, 'Yep, All good now.' OK, Did . . ? =] I ask cause i like this, curious, and will continue watching till i die or learn. You smart guys amaze me, Wish my brain would get it. Thanks!
I believe that they were some G.E engineer's idea of a tube shield, which is completely unnecessary for the 50C5 and 35W4 tubes. G.E used to do some weird things in the 1940s and 50s, I had one set from about the same era as this one that had a printed circuit board mounted under a steel chassis, with plastic bushings around the tube sockets, I think it was U.S built, but I had a similar Canadian built one that was just point to point wired with no P.C board.
I see what they are for now, this set uses tube sockets similar to those used in Zenith TVs where the solder joints are made inside of posts around the perimeter of each tube. I guess that the purpose of the donuts is to cover those solder posts as well as act as tube shields, though Zenith TVs never bothered with the donuts.
wait wait "more trouble for wells fargo" HOW OLD IS THIS VID?!?! was he like a 50's ish country signer long since dead and forgotten by only a few who either listened to him or know his sings on the radio
Yes, digital’s going away. Just a short lived thing, we don’t need it. Yay!! Beatman’s schematics, somebody trying to download them for $5.00 apiece. Can be obtained for free. “Run his bandwidth through the roof” Lol😂😂😂. Very funny. Sounds like digital is not a profitable way for this world 🌎 to go. Another very nice radio. 19 years before I was born, and 6 years before ‘57 Chevy trucks came about. Talk about quality with 🚗 vehicles and radios 📻 alike. Even food was better then, too.
it's so weird because in the SouthEast, HD is everywhere. Everyone has these huge wattage FM mono talk radio channels but they're in HD with *four* stereo subchannels to make up for the lack of real music stations. AM is the same way.
I think that if they use a De-scrambler into the radios that decode HD FM then you could make money from it in that you have to pay to get the CAM module and Listening Card that lets you to listen to the HD FM channels.
one thing you don't cover in the am versus fm. the topography of the greater los angeles metropolitan and suburbia notwithstanding... americans in the everpresent thirst for residential bliss, increasingly are not willing to abide the 50,000 watt hot transmission towers grandfathered in the rutherfords of nj, long island sound area here in ny.. and wherever the hell they threw them in in LA back in the day. new accumulations of american society from north dakota to galveston.. from sand point idaho, to cape may, just don't want, big, ugly enormous transmission towers. they want an accumulation of a bazillion tiny antennae providing complete coverage at lower transmission powers. less icky to the eye. i worked in wireless carrier applications for eight years, for verizon, sprint, t-mobile and at&t on new applications from colt's neck nj to stamford ct. the tin foil hat brigade.. the granola eating vegans, need everything HIDDEN.
6:04 Ugh... 'digital' AM?... that would sure trash up the band.... all that hash and trash around KNX would be all over the place... no more BCBDX'ing... yup... digital is definitely not a viable thing for such a narrow band.
fm sucks anyway of course they can't make any money the stations here in s florida r bad it seems your choices r Christian comercials 40 year old played out rock music
hi shango nice job the same way you did the coil cap i used in win i made my if cans but you work with tube set i made many of solid state but realy tube are fun and so simply
yo to you best freind and god bless you and i are the same in taste in old set and we both like the fine build ones so thankes for posting and good job one more time
hi shango nice job the same way you did the coil cap i used in win i made my if cans but you work with tube set i made many of solid state but realy tube are fun and so simply
hi shango nice job the same way you did the coil cap i used in win i made my if cans but you work with tube set i made many of solid state but realy tube are fun and so simply
Shango, if you could teach electronics, you should. You have a natural ability. I'm no where competent as you are, but from watching your videos, I have already learned so much. Thank you so much for posting these videos. They are an inspiration! By the way, I love definitely love the sarcasm in your videos!
Those postwar AA5 radios were inexpensive and durable, and despite their reputation as low-end receivers, as long as you put in replacement components of the same values as the originals, they'll work quite solidly and reliably! It's amazing to me that they dominated the home receiver market for 35 years!
It is amazing to me that you were able to find and re-engineer a fix for this problem. Nice!
That's a rather nice looking one. Lots of useful knowledge scattered across these videos.
I love old tube radios ,when they are restored ,I love how you can get new life out of them I like how tubes sound I bet newer radio don't last as long ,or sound as good.
Just purchased one of these, waiting for delivery. Refrigerator white, 1950-completely re-capped,
[& etc]. $ 80.oo. Looks fantastic.
Glad to hear you talk about H.D.radio. I had questions.
Hi shango: I don't know what you're doing, or even what you're saying half the time, but I enjoy watching your channel. The best part is watching these pieces of history being brought back to life. Thank you!
I got mine ( same as mine. Mine crackled too. Mine had a dirty tuning capacitor.)
Mine does receive quite well. And clock keeps perfect time.
📻🙂
Your correct HD Radio never caught on I like AM radio CBS news comes to mind your videos teach me so much. I like the Spanish radio stations
he is right about the HD radio. the HD Radio is nice but there is no reason to convert to it...
Anyone remember stereo AM radio of the period 1979-1980? That never took off either
Craig Nehring nope I was born in 1981
Craig...i sure do..was living in Moore County, NC..they tried it there...two huge towers..millions spent to convert previous AM station office and the guy went bankrupt..you are the only person i have read that noted it...Rich.
Jason Uzak Last night, I tried my GE AM clock radio and it's still humming like crazy, because it was from 1951, but I trying DXing the stations at night and everything comes in well. 1010 WINS comes in very well, other stations from other states comes in well around night fall, and I don't hear an IBOC interferences at all since most of the IBOC's had pulled the plug, because HD radio on AM is a huge failure, so they used it for FM.
Thanks shango066, always learn something. Thanks
Great video as always Shango.
I'd do anything to get my HAM radio HF training from Shango. I'm sure he would be the most awesome teacher haha
I have one of these It's super deaf. No crackle though Thinking now maybe i should look at the if cans. Great video!
Any videos of mines and the desert with ham radios and abandoned places that's video was awesome the old TV's you found and one radio from the desert - I like the min videos and how you explorer
Don't need HD radio. These older radios can outperform the newest radios it seems. I have an early 1970's Zenith Circle of Sound clock radio that I use when I'm at home visiting family. That radio picks up a station in my home town 280 miles away (AM) very clearly with minimal background noise. My car doesn't even pick it up as good!
By putting the caps on the outside I wonder if you made the IF stage into a regenerative amplifier. I have a Heathkit shortwave radio which has adjustable feedback around the whole IF strip for its BFO.
GE also made the model 535, an AA6 (6 tube) clock radio. Note that shango066's radio is designated to be a "radio alarm clock." The model 535 was a "radio clock". In the early days of adding an electric alarm clock to a radio, providing the "wake to music" feature, apparently the industry hadn't settled on the name "clock radio" (making "clock" the adjective, instead of "radio"), which we use today.
The GE model 535 was similar. It did not have the third section in the variable tuning capacitor, which some AA6 radios had. I acquired a hand me down GE model 535 when I was in my early teens, repaired it, and kept it running until I graduated from college. I am quite sure that it suffered silver mica disease. I didn't know what was going on, so, when all else had failed, I replaced the IF transformers with those from a junk radio and got my model 535 running again.
Briefly in the video at about 5:21, we see that the B+ feeds to a tap on the audio output transformer primary. One primary winding lead goes to the plate of the audio output tube. The other goes to a 1K resistor and from it to the second filter capacitor, providing B+ for the other tubes. The DC in the two sections of the primary provide partially cancelling DC magnetic flux, allowing GE to use a physically smaller audio output transformer. (Too much DC magnetic flux will saturate the core. Designers use a core with an air gap and also use enough metal to handle the flux.) The downside of this strategy is that some of the output signal power is delivered to the 1K resistor instead of the speaker. If the audio output transformer requires replacement and you only have a transformer without a tap (scavenged from another radio), tie the tap connection and the 1K resistor connection together.
you are damn right, that digital radio never did fully catch on..
I have that exact radio and it works after replacing all tubes and caps
hi shango nice job
the same way you did the coil cap i used in win i made my if cans but you work with tube set i made many of solid state but realy tube are fun and so simply
710 WOR here in NYC shut off HD Radio a while ago, ironic as that was the only AM station I could consistantly lock and listen to in HD. I also hear that WCBS 880 turns it off during their Yankees game broadcasts, I hope it goes away forever as it kills any chance of DXing WLS 890 here. Despite being a clear channel, I rarely can get a lock on its HD signal 30 miles from their transmitter. HD Radio will likely stick around on FM, it seems to work fine there.
FM stations have a much wider bandwidth to start with, and a larger separation between each station then on AM broadcasts, not to mention the much shorter range, so interference isn't as much of an issue as with AM. Even before the H.D fiasco started FM stations used their sidebands to multiplex stereo, SCA, and even Muzak broadcasts.
Cool!... that set is well built!
I like how they put the tubes down into metal foxholes ;-)
Well built these radios certainly are! I have several of this particular GE model. Same circuit design, same cabinet shape, but each has a different color cabinet. They are all long overdue to be cleaned up, recapped, realigned, and brought back to life again. Most do have SMD problems, so that will be fixed, too. I'm now inspired to do it, because of this video.
@@jeromewysocki8809 Right on, Jerome... I wish success to you in getting yours all up and running :-)
Actually, the metal "donuts" covered a set of 8 "wells" surrounding each of the 7 pin tubes, 7 for connection to the tube pins and an 8th tie point. GE called this their "mechanized chassis." It was a forerunner of the printed circuit board. About 13:48 into the video, shango066 shows a good view from the bottom. Assemblers installed components with leads stuck into the wells. In a later manufacturing step, the chassis was moved over a pool of molten solder with the wells in the solder. Solder soaked up into the wells to provide the solder joint connections. There were also "terminal strips", a set of wells in line, used as connection points. The "donut" and the "terminal strip" covers were added later, preventing objects poked through the back of the radio from contacting the circuitry. Note that some connections were still hand soldered, such as those to the IF transformers and the volume control.
The "donuts" were nice for the serviceman. Just place the tube in the hole and twist it until the pins lined up with the holes in the socket, then push down into place.
GE also used the "mechanized chassis" for some of its 1950s TV sets. The TV set wells were not covered. Zenith appears to have adopted GE's "mechanized chassis" for its TV sets and used it through the 1960s, long after other manufacturers were using printed circuit boards. Zenith called its products "hand crafted." Later, Zenith did adopt printed circuit boards.
I used to be one of those guys that only rebuilt a slug-tuned IF can if I had to, but nowadays I actually consider it a part of radio restoration. If SMD only happened once in awhile I'd take my chances, but most of the radios I get have it or develop it shortly thereafter.
Interesting point and I agree. If switching off analog radio doesn't free up a chunk of bandwidth the fcc will never bother. And since HD radio uses the same chunk of spectrum they would have to not only replace the analog tech they would have to replace HD radio too. I doubt that will happen anytime soon.
One of these got away from me....I was cleaning out a hoarder house and there was a nice Emerson in great shape sitting in the "toss out" pile. Next time back at the house it was gone. Too bad.
Excellent. I assume when your mentioned digital I assume you mean DRM digital radio Mondial. I am a ham radio operator in Northern England & I tapped one of my transceivers 12 kHz IF & I feed that into my PC sound card & use decoding software called DREAM which also displays text. It's possible to have 4 stereo channels or data mix text for news for example & it fits on a single standard AM channel. It's even possible to send a low definition TV picture. I only get DRM on shortwave as on our AM band 531 to 1602 kHz in 9 kHz steps it's just analog. DRM sounds great & with no fading or QSB signal, it stays the same level regardless of signal strength but will start echoing & break up when the signal is below the threshold. Our AM band gets swamped at night with Spanish stations. Very little elsse.
Thanks, good info on the 75pf caps.
With those thin frame steel loudspeakers often they can deform with a knock. Try twisting case and see if distortion disappears freeing voicecoil.
I hope you are right about analog radio not going away. That would pretty much make all old radios useless unless you had a converter system.
Seems how you are good on fixing these, I should get you to fix mine.
Jay Bee Really! Did ya now. LOL
Is the digital signal the stereo AM radio you get in the states? I wonder if it's better than our DAB system, it can't be worse?
Only two strong AM stations that we got in the SF bay is kgo and kcbs. All other am stations been sold.
This is cool, I have some radios with Silver Mica Disease, now I think I'll try to tackle them.
This S.M.Disease: I have an AM/FM Admiral (ca 1948-?-)
This sounds like a major operation. I don’t know how to work on them myself. With all new caps in it, would it be worth paying for the repairs?
My grandparents had one like that in their bedroom in the early 60s
DEW409 If you are in New York City and you can get WABC back when they played Top 40 Music on AM.
I've never seen that type of chassis before with the collars around the tubes.
Also HD radio makes AM sound so fake. It completely ruins the charm, magic, and soul of AM.
AM might not sound as good as FM but I love that part of AM! Where I live in canada there is a station that covers the whole province with the one station (yes I know for a fact it is one and it covers from here into Saskatchewan) and they play classic country music so nothing beats classic country music on AM
yo to you best freind and god bless you and i are the same in taste in old set and we both like the fine build ones so thankes for posting and good job one more time
If only more people took good care of their American-built radios, many would still be in operation today.
i used to have one of those and it got thrown away a long time ago by my mother because she said it was a fire hazard... she got me a chinese thing... i want one of them again
What is that white stuff on the underside of the radio? It looks more like some kind if sealant, but what on earth is it doing?
This radio was manufactured before GE went cheap. It was manufactured in Syracuse, New York at the relatively new "Electronics Park" complex built in the late 1940's.
Something like you would see on the I love Lucy show.
We don't have AM broadcasting anymore in Europe, I heard FM is nearing the end as well.
Really???
Shango, I remember some time ago, someone asked if SMD was caused by the electrostatic field across the capacitor. I.e., would NOS IF cans from 50 or 60 years ago have SMD? I don't recall if there was ever an answer. If it's caused by the electrostatic filed, it seems that only the capacitor on the primary side would need to be replaced, since there is next to no voltage across the secondary. In one of your videos, you show sparking under the can. Was that on both sides, or just the primary side?
It doesnt appear to have anything to do with use, most of these radios have sat for many years unused.
hi shango nice job
Wow that radio sure is hot... so many stations ... so little time...lol
What do you mean by a "hot radio", shang? It's very sensitive? Particularly to DX (distant stations), or otherwise? Also, why not replace that ratty old speaker, especially since the voice coil /bakelite ring it's mounted on keeps banging into the spider? I'm guessing the freq response of that thing is barely 150 Hz - 4 KHz (i know AM audio is very bandwidth limited, but still...)
Pretty old clock radio, nice
Not a bad radio for it's age.
I own this very make/model/year radio - my first restore/repair. I inadvertently took apart the clock - I sought to de-solder the wires, simply to move the clock out of the way. Suffice it to say, my work bench is now covered in little gears and levers. Where do I get info on putting this clock back together? Someone, please help me!
I can't thank you enough - however I did finally work it out. Thanks for the tip and the website info.
mmmm tuneing into the strange sounds of r2 d2 i see
we had giant butiful lw/mw/sw transmitter parks here in the netherlands almost all demolished now.,.its sad.. we dont have any am tranmitters anymore here in this country ,other then some small local radio pirats, and one religion channel... no more Hilversum in the air!, Radio Kootwijk gone (lw and sw) Radio netherlands rents transmitter space in england or germany, no more own transmitters here anymore sadly.
Norway is first country to start switching off FM Radio and going over completely to Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) completed nationwide by Dec. 13, 2017. Given the size of the country - with its mountains and fjords - and its small population, it is particularly expensive to offer both FM and digital audio broadcasting, it would save180 million kroner a year, or about $25 million in operation cost.
siemenstraffic and everyone hates it.
Shango, request that when you scan the dial, that you stop a bit longer on 1210AM.
im not sure we have a station on 1210??
I had an old age brain fart. I was thinking of the classical music station, but I guess that that moved to FM. Please disregard all after "Shango" lol
@@johnschroeder6288 - ok, i was curious en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WPHT (HD 24h\day) Philadelphia =] WMMR
nice info . . new to all this, so maybe that's why. = - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1210_AM
hi shango
yo
No matter what, we'll be inundated with commercials.
I have one of those....I use it quite a bit.
no re-cap for longevity?
Dr. Shango066 requests former patient to come in for checkup. True Touch Tuner - Just - What did you do Really?
"Hot" means, what? 'touchy', sensitive, snappy, quick crisp sound? ~ I'm rambling, lol At end of videos, 'Yep, All good now.' OK, Did . . ? =]
I ask cause i like this, curious, and will continue watching till i die or learn. You smart guys amaze me, Wish my brain would get it. Thanks!
I want to know why the tube sockets have donuts around them. Weird - never seen that before.
I believe that they were some G.E engineer's idea of a tube shield, which is completely unnecessary for the 50C5 and 35W4 tubes. G.E used to do some weird things in the 1940s and 50s, I had one set from about the same era as this one that had a printed circuit board mounted under a steel chassis, with plastic bushings around the tube sockets, I think it was U.S built, but I had a similar Canadian built one that was just point to point wired with no P.C board.
I see what they are for now, this set uses tube sockets similar to those used in Zenith TVs where the solder joints are made inside of posts around the perimeter of each tube. I guess that the purpose of the donuts is to cover those solder posts as well as act as tube shields, though Zenith TVs never bothered with the donuts.
Police radio?
shysterLawer ha! i get it
I Love Your Channel!!!
What was the voltage rating of those 75 pf caps? GREAT VIDEO!!
low, can be 50v. remember the value for every radio is different. finding the correct value is the important part
wait wait "more trouble for wells fargo" HOW OLD IS THIS VID?!?! was he like a 50's ish country signer long since dead and forgotten by only a few who either listened to him or know his sings on the radio
Siliconed cap connections xD, stop the leakage lol
I thought ceramic disc capacitors are not suitable in this application because they have a tendency to drift?
Jerry Carriera I thought he said those were NP0's. If so, they would be very stable
Can test a Geiger counter with those clock hands
Este radio relógio é interessante! Rio Brasil
why didn't they make the caps external from the factory instead of internal in those if cans .seems like a mistake on there part
Likely never considered someone would be using this same little portable radio 65+ years later.
Whats white mica disease?
Given these away, unable to service, unable to test caps, had no knowledge~
I would have replaced the caps just for good measure.
? every cap in it is new including the IF capacitors
silver mica disease?
Yes, digital’s going away. Just a short lived thing, we don’t need it. Yay!! Beatman’s schematics, somebody trying to download them for $5.00 apiece. Can be obtained for free. “Run his bandwidth through the roof” Lol😂😂😂. Very funny. Sounds like digital is not a profitable way for this world 🌎 to go. Another very nice radio. 19 years before I was born, and 6 years before ‘57 Chevy trucks came about. Talk about quality with 🚗 vehicles and radios 📻 alike. Even food was better then, too.
it's so weird because in the SouthEast, HD is everywhere. Everyone has these huge wattage FM mono talk radio channels but they're in HD with *four* stereo subchannels to make up for the lack of real music stations. AM is the same way.
am and sw are nearly dead here in uk
16:22 aliens confirmed
DAB Radio is coming to USA in 2020. HD Radio will be gone.
I heard that horrible packers game!
I think that if they use a De-scrambler into the radios that decode HD FM then you could make money from it in that you have to pay to get the CAM module and Listening Card that lets you to listen to the HD FM channels.
one thing you don't cover in the am versus fm. the topography of the greater los angeles metropolitan and suburbia notwithstanding... americans in the everpresent thirst for residential bliss, increasingly are not willing to abide the 50,000 watt hot transmission towers grandfathered in the rutherfords of nj, long island sound area here in ny.. and wherever the hell they threw them in in LA back in the day. new accumulations of american society from north dakota to galveston.. from sand point idaho, to cape may, just don't want, big, ugly enormous transmission towers. they want an accumulation of a bazillion tiny antennae providing complete coverage at lower transmission powers. less icky to the eye. i worked in wireless carrier applications for eight years, for verizon, sprint, t-mobile and at&t on new applications from colt's neck nj to stamford ct. the tin foil hat brigade.. the granola eating vegans, need everything HIDDEN.
6:04 Ugh... 'digital' AM?... that would sure trash up the band.... all that hash and trash around KNX would be all over the place... no more BCBDX'ing... yup... digital is definitely not a viable thing for such a narrow band.
Странный метод настройки.
fm sucks anyway of course they can't make any money the stations here in s florida r bad it seems your choices r Christian comercials 40 year old played out rock music
I see the output transformer has a humdinger on it.
I thought that was the torquel snorffolator. Or was that the grimbel masticulator ... hmm.
hahh hahhhh,, everyone knows,of course,thats a funicular difragelated 3 ohm
pistchiator
We have a good radio market here in Philadelphia to.
Your right FCC can't make money off what you said. Basters FCC.
hi shango nice job
the same way you did the coil cap i used in win i made my if cans but you work with tube set i made many of solid state but realy tube are fun and so simply
yo to you best freind and god bless you and i are the same in taste in old set and we both like the fine build ones so thankes for posting and good job one more time
interesting name, where you from?
hi shango nice job
the same way you did the coil cap i used in win i made my if cans but you work with tube set i made many of solid state but realy tube are fun and so simply
hi shango nice job
the same way you did the coil cap i used in win i made my if cans but you work with tube set i made many of solid state but realy tube are fun and so simply