Follow up video on remote control section repair by new owner. kzbin.info/www/bejne/bH7SindobbWMqJo
@F40PH-2CAT2 жыл бұрын
Oh boy this whole remote control design is bonkers.
@frankw.mclaughlin1938 Жыл бұрын
Remarkably while watching an old "Mr. Fong the Fatal Hour circa 1934 this same set was featured as a murder mystery link in a murder. Look up the show and go to about the 55 min mark and the radio with its remote feature was showcased.
@scratchback200111 ай бұрын
This set is amazing. I'm 62 and when I visited my high school teacher once, she had a remote controlled radio and TV. Both remotes were like a decadic phone. You literally dialed in a TV station or a radio station but the great thing was that they were both connected by cables not wireless remotes. There was plenty of length and all the pots were on the remotes. If you unplugged the remotes, the internal pots and tuning kicked in if it needed say if the remotes were stolen or lost. I live in Australia and we had some great minds here. My grandmother bought my mum an Australian made Kriesler 6 element 3 way radio gram. The tweeters are electrostatic ribbon units and the bass and mids were magnavox. It was 10 watts a channel push/pull and the neighbours complained about the volume.....especially the bass. It hasnt been turned on for years and I will dim bulb it when I get the chance. Thanks Shango. You are a very talented man. You have what I have....a 6th sense which you are born with. Some technicians don't get it. I do. Cheers Andrew Melbourne Victoria Australia. The pic is me on the right with my first love. We had a wonderful relationship until HIV took him from me.
@ec81072 жыл бұрын
That remote set up would have been jaw dropping in 1940. The whole neighborhood would have come over to witness it.
@johnmaki30462 жыл бұрын
Philco radios were AWESOME! I LOVE REAL (okay, "vintage") ELECTRONICS! THESE WILL BE THE "classic cars" of the future! Quality is ALWAYS classic!
@Suddenlyits19602 жыл бұрын
I’m sure this radio will be adopted very quickly. It has a beautiful Art Deco design. Philco was very advanced for its time! Not only did they have a model with their unique “Beam of Light” changer,but the Mystery Remote control system was also revolutionary. You were able to turn the unit on/off,raise and lower the volume,mute the volume,change radio stations,change to the record player,and even change the records,all wirelessly from the comfort of your chair!
@craignehring2 жыл бұрын
Back in the mid sixties I came across one of them Beam of Light phono turntables and read up on them. Like a dumb ass teen, we laughed at it and smashed it to bits
@johnparichuk83672 жыл бұрын
I have an old Philco 39-45 I've had since I was 16 (1966). It was part of a rummage sale at my church. The parish priest told me I could have it. It didn't work. But I got it working that afternoon. Beautiful sound.
@Rev22-212 жыл бұрын
My first was finding a 1939 Zenith in my grandmother's closet in 1968. I promised her if I could inherit it I might be the only one in the family who'd ever get it to work again. After about fainting and asking how I knew to ask that question (I was eleven at that time) I said I didn't know but could I(?). She then agreed an in 2005, my son and wife picked it up and now works setting in my living room.
@herbertsusmann9862 жыл бұрын
I bought one of these with the remote off of eBay for $0.01 several years ago. That was the minimum bid and I was the only bidder. I had to drive about 6 hours to Ohio to pick it up. I felt sorry for the guy so gave him $20 anyway. I still have not restored it although I later picked up another remote box that was in better shape. The remote boxes used to show up on eBay from time to time for a reasonable price. This was the very first remote controlled anything sold commercially and as such is a keeper for anyone's collection.
@robertliskey4202 жыл бұрын
I agree even though I am afraid to dig into mine (different than shown here) when it quit see my other comment Thanks
@DEW4092 жыл бұрын
I have a 1942 philco console that my grandfather bought. Has had one new rectifier tube and NO work under the chassis. Still works LOUD with very little hum. No doubt needs caps, but still blasts out the audio. When I was young, I used the phono input so the thing was one half of my stereo. I am 67 now and the thing still works. Don't always dis Philco they were the most popular radio builder of the time and you got what you paid for.
@westelaudio9432 жыл бұрын
Yes at least replace the coupling caps otherwise you're gonna fry a tube or the OPT.
@lawrencehansen67882 жыл бұрын
It's supposed to look like a spinet piano! When the cover is open, it looks like a music stand, and the "teeth" thing represents the lyre-shaped support for the pedals. A wild creation from the hay-day of radio! Love the Chicago stations on the presets. WBBM and WGN are of course still around. WMBI is the Moody Bible Institute station, 90.1 FM now (a 100,000 watt station, btw - the AM station was sold off only last year and is now WXES). And I remember listening to a revived WJJD playing genuine "oldies" (from the '40s and '50s) at work in the '90s.
@MrCrystalcranium2 жыл бұрын
That volume control is amazing. Yes it's gimmicky but it was full of great ideas and the build quality is pretty darn impressive. If I were a person of means at that time, I'd love to have this in my 1940 mancave.
@tarstarkusz2 жыл бұрын
This thing was 189.95 in 1940. That is FOUR THOUSAND Dollars in 2022 funny money and that is only if you believe the Bullshit inflation numbers that massively underestimate inflation. "A person of means" indeed.
@Rev22-212 жыл бұрын
As a collector myself....and thinking along the same lines....Yeah, that would have been neat, but in today's money that set would have set you back $3965. Now some may say they'd never do that but.....remember radios were in their day the computer, the TV, the immediate News, primary sources for entertainment and connection to the world.... Sad to think of what's become of them in my opinion 😕.
@rangercv42632 жыл бұрын
Best Shango comment ever, “WENR. OK, I’ll just leave that one alone.”
@hitechredneck63662 жыл бұрын
Those are Chicagoland stations. The radio was home in the Midwest back in the day.
@stirlingschmidt63252 жыл бұрын
AWESOME! This is the spark I think I need to get my 39-116 (very similar, except for the cabinet) running. I picked it up as a leftover from an auction, $20. Has all original Philco tubes...
@stirlingschmidt63252 жыл бұрын
This is a real gas - you're having all the same WTF moments I had with mine when I got it!
@johnbellas4902 жыл бұрын
Also IF you want to use the sets own manual volume control, all you have to do is push directly in on the volume control and then turn the control up or down while pushing IN on the control. This control only operates a set of switch contacts that engages the little motor clockwise or counter clockwise.
@turboslag2 жыл бұрын
Philco had an even earlier wireless remote radio, in 1933!! This one needs to adopted and restored, it has to be a mega rare survivor. Imagine how much it must have cost in it's day?!
@1McMurdoSilver2 жыл бұрын
As prev mentioned, the callsigns are all Chicago area stations. Also, the "Television Sound" was to receive the prewar TV audio for use with the Philco's prewar "Vision Only" television attachment, which never made it to market
@allanroberts75972 жыл бұрын
We’ll you answered a mystery for me. Back in the early 70’s my dad brought home a huge radio. Huge to me. He played with it. The gutted it and kept the cabinet to store paint cans in. But I remembered it had the vertical wheels on either side of the dial. Now I know it was a Philco. I do remember it played.
@pneumatic002 жыл бұрын
That is one wild Contraption you have there, my man. That must have been a very expensive set. Some years ago I bought the entire contents of a garage belonging to a very old man who had fiddled with radio since World War ii. Among a zillion other things in that garage was the entire Rider Perpetual manual set. Those books probably occupied 25 ft of shelf space. I was happy that I was eventually able to find somebody to donate them to, otherwise they would have ended up in a dump somewhere.
@shango0662 жыл бұрын
Its been adopted out and its new daddy already purchased a remote for it. Can I get 200 more comments that it lived in Chicago? Please ohh pretty please... Chicago, Chicago that toddling town Chicago, Chicago I will show you around I bet your bottom dollar you'll have some fin in Chicago, Chicago The town that Billy Sunday couldn't shut down
@acefeeley90072 жыл бұрын
Chicago baby!
@trevorhaddox68842 жыл бұрын
The remote on these is more fun than spinning the antenna. I've operated a restored one at a museum (I'm a donor so they let me touch stuff), they sound like a jukebox mechanism (cause they basically are) when tuning. EDIT: The remote looks like a rotary dial phone because it does work on pulses, it's basically just a radio telegraph system.
@Rev22-212 жыл бұрын
Shango....Betting I speak for the majority here...I appreciate the mixing in of old radios to the channel. YES, Tv's are great, transistor radios too but the occasional antiques are likewise. Thanks, best regards and keep 'em coming.
@One-Crazy-Cat2 жыл бұрын
Darn I always miss out on these!
@Roland_Tr909_Swing2 жыл бұрын
Is that thing at the bottom an antenna balun ?
@romandjma.recordplayers78062 жыл бұрын
I’ll admit that I just started watching, so this may be corrected, but this may be a bit older. One of these made an appearance in the movie Topper Takes A Trip from 1938
@acefeeley90072 жыл бұрын
The first 2 numbers in a Philco model number is year of manufacture 99.9% of the time. 1940
@acefeeley90072 жыл бұрын
However to be fair, a lot of Philco consoles looked like this one.
@romandjma.recordplayers78062 жыл бұрын
@@acefeeley9007 I’m almost positive it was this model. They used the movie as an advertisement in a way, although the Philco company isn’t mentioned they talk about and demonstrate the mystery box by name
@acefeeley90072 жыл бұрын
@@romandjma.recordplayers7806 anything is possible my friend
@Rev22-212 жыл бұрын
@@romandjma.recordplayers7806 : See my original post......Philco usually introduced a year model in the previous year's month of June. This model 40-217 was no different and (as stated earlier) had the cabinet as the 1939 40-216RX. With that being said....that model may have debuted as early as June 1938. So you're probably correct on your assumption.
@JZCRAZY2 жыл бұрын
I love big radios and TV's that look like furniture. You could feel the quality just by looking at it. This is very nice!
@capolaya2 жыл бұрын
16:39 It is Art Deco at its finest. That was the fashion at that point in time.
@Daniel_cheems2 жыл бұрын
Gotta give it to Philco, this radio was way ahead of its time! Love 'em or hate 'em, their marketing could have a field day with all the available features...
@hestheMaster2 жыл бұрын
Super rare radio in nice condition for its age. Typical rubber coated wiring issues. Needs full recapping. Thank you for showing this rare piece of radio history Shango. It is a restorable radio even without the remote.
@vintageradios77902 жыл бұрын
This radio was very expensive considering the time it was made. Mass produced in 1940 the end of the depression people still pulling out of the depression and most not having money to buy something as expensive as this. A lot of these radios survived there are still quite a bit of them around I see them on the Internet a lot. This example is exceptionally clean. This interesting is that the remote control for this looks like a wooden jewelry box with a telephone dial on top. Fully restore and Recaps this radio will sound great because of the push pull amplifier it has.
@mervynstent15782 жыл бұрын
Don’t forget WW2
@F40PH-2CAT2 жыл бұрын
There's a listing on etsy for the remote control, if you want to go all in.
@musicom672 жыл бұрын
"Philco Mystery Control Demonstration", here on KZbin - - shows you that exact remote control you are missing. Plus, this is the phono-less model. Dial it in, man!
@thattubesound22142 жыл бұрын
Those are all Chicago stations that I listened to as I was growing up. As usual, great video. I wish I was close enough, because I'd "adopt" this one, for sure! I have one of those remotes. Cheers!
@johnmaki30462 жыл бұрын
I had (my Mom owned this, until her death) a Philco "tube" radio/ phono, nightstand (GREAT SOUND, GREAT PHONO,WORKED!), that I sold, in 1990, for $15! I STILL MISS IT! BEAUTIFUL WOOD CABINET, TOO!
@vancouverman43132 жыл бұрын
In 39:00 the capacitor causes a delay or phase difference between the voltage waveform and the current waveform, giving the motor "slip" and hence giving it the ability to produce torque. Once the capacitance goes down the delay isn't enough and the torque produced isn't enough to move the motor. If you need to make a non-polarized capacitor for this purpose, just take 2 electrolytics in series with the two positives tied together to produce one capacitor attached across the motor.
@nicklikesradio2 жыл бұрын
Thats what i did with my $10 39-55.
@qwertykeyboard59012 жыл бұрын
You can do that with capacitors?
@randyr.parker26982 жыл бұрын
That was a VERY expensive radio in it's day!!!!!! VERY COOL!
@caulktel2 жыл бұрын
That is the coolest radio I have ever seen, completely restored even cooler.
@jeffreyyoung41042 жыл бұрын
When I was a little kid, I visited a house that had a working Philco with remote, I was warned, very sternly, not to touch! I knew about shortwave radio, and I asked the right questions, and after a few minutes of talking about it, we were listening to the radio, and trying the shortwave bands for the first time on that radio! I ignited the SWL bug in the owner! Actually, it was the owners son, but he had inherited it from his father after he passed, and he wasn't sure as to what it did until I talked him into pushing the right buttons, and trying it in the evening, instead of in the daytime. Those antennas that are built in, work fine most of the time, but they did provide for external antennas which worked much better. BTW most thyratrons are not radioactive.
@poetlorryit2 жыл бұрын
Shang's Tibetan Prayer Wheel moment 😌
@stephenkrzanowski2 жыл бұрын
Wow that is one fancy Philco. Very Art-Deco and wireless remote. Amazing piece.
@brucehensley87702 жыл бұрын
Wow! That is way ahead of its time. There are a couple of those remotes on Ebay.
@garp322 жыл бұрын
A friend and I visit a very large antique mall nearby. Every time we go there, we've been looking at a Philco remote control that been there forever. Always wondered what models this was intended for. Well, if that does get adopted, I can hook the buyer up on the remote. Also, my friend has a model that is very close to this. Not a remote set, but does have the early FM band on it. Has the same piano keyboard cover, thumb wheels...etc. however his has hinged doors on the front. It's a beautiful set. Happy 4th of July holiday weekend Shango. Waiting for your annual 4th of July EOL video with much anticipation! 💣
@johnbellas4902 жыл бұрын
Hello Shango!! Whats in the box ?? The box is the cover for the relay system that selects the coils and caps for the preset stations! The remote control transmitted at a predetermined RF Frequency which was received by the big loop antenna wound around inside the console cabinet. The remote PULSED the RF at a given rate and the radio received this pulsed RF and operated a set of coils that indexed the selector at the same number of (MOVES) as there was pulses of rf received. The volume was also controlled by the remote with again a few pulses of RF. but I am not going to get into that right now!
@kano84742 жыл бұрын
HEY SHANGO!!!! Happy independence day!! Thanks for the video
@Spore20Esq2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for what you do! I stumbled upon your videos yesterday. I was researching for a philco 41 608-92 cabinet radio record player recorder. It's been hard to find information on. It was my great grandfather's and my great aunt gifted it to me recently. It does not function and is in pretty rough shape missing buttons and knobs. It still has the microphone and all of the internals, of course most of the wires are rotten. I live in Michigan and I can't find anybody to repair this beautiful radio. It even came with the original 78s that my great grandpa recorded on with all my relatives they used to sing and perform. My great grandpa's name was Chester Troutman and he was a performer who lived in Ohio and he traveled the Midwest performing music with a singing parakeet named Alto. I have around 20 78 RPM records he cut himself all with this exact philco 41. Back to the point at hand is I can't find anyone to fix this. Maybe we could work something out? I could pay you to fix it and you could feature it in a video! Maybe you could even play one of my records for your audience? There's a lot to choose from. Anyways have a great day and regardless of your response keep doing what you're doing it is a talent and a gift that is rare in the world today.
@Rev22-212 жыл бұрын
That tunable antenna looks similar to the Zenith "Wave Guide Magnet" antennas back in the day. As far a gimmicks... most every brand had & has them to varying degrees. For example: RCA had an electric motor that'd turn the dial selector to any of eight pre select's, though it was a remote model it wasn't wireless (and it was a 1937 model). As far as original cost and other facts: The 40-217 Philco used the same cabinet as the June 1939 model 40-216RX, but uses the same chassis as the 40-215RX. It originally sold for $189.95. In today's money....that'd be $3965.83 adjusted for inflation.
@cwradio45712 жыл бұрын
It reminded me of an old pin ball machine when you opened it up.
@Segantech2 жыл бұрын
Yeah men, I like your radio. Because I love our retro Design.
@thomasbecker53132 жыл бұрын
I restored a Philco 42-400 about 12 years ago. Very big. According to an original brochure for 1942, that I have, this was their most expensive radio console and the last radio made before WW II. AM, FM (the original FM no longer used) and SW. No remote control thankfully, but talk about a complicated and packed chassis. It did have separate bass and tone controls. It now sits on my 3rd floor landing and gets used often since I run my own AM house broadcasting system for all my AM radios. With 11 tubes this will not only play your favorite music it will also heat the room!
@RJDA.Dakota2 жыл бұрын
The presets are Chicagoland stations. The woodwork is still simply beautiful. Back in the 1940’s it was a beautiful addition to the living room.
@retrorusty17082 жыл бұрын
I’m interested in this console!! Judging from the radio station presets, it’s from the Chicago, IL area and it would honestly be cool to see it back in this area. Very cool!!
@55benchguy2 жыл бұрын
Philco was from Pennsylvania , and we had TON's of them roll through our little shop in Pittsburgh PA. I have restored so many of them that I was sick of seeing them. but now I miss them :(
@daytondigger12 жыл бұрын
I enjoy watching old items resurrected almost as much as I enjoy abandoned mine exploration and bottle digging. I quit cave exploring a while back, sold my tube tester and vintage radios and now I just bottle dig.
@chrisschanneloftechnology47432 жыл бұрын
These are highly sought after especially if you have the remote. The remote is totally amazing. It looks like old rotary phone dial. Too bad you don’t have the remote
@ElectroRestore2 жыл бұрын
I'm in love! I worked on a ton of art deco to 50's sets. But I never got my hands wrapped around a wireless remote chassis from the early 1940's! Hats off to you my friend! Please restore it to the max! :)
@LanceHall2 жыл бұрын
I have a Philco 41-280 that was set out next to the street in front of a house a couple years ago. Tubes are missing. I've been watching channels like yours to get an education on how to restore it.
@randyr.parker26982 жыл бұрын
I think it's supposed to look like an old organ. Those middle pieces resemble the foot controls on an old organ. I tore apart on old 1970's organ that had foot controls that resembled those middle pieces on the front.
@shango0662 жыл бұрын
Earlier for nutrition is your mom malignant over for fourfall he is Sissy tracer
@randyr.parker26982 жыл бұрын
@@shango066 🤣👍 Thanks for the 'informative' reply! LOL! You're the best!😉
@stevem.18532 жыл бұрын
Similar art deco design aesthetic to jukeboxes from the same era. Also I've seen early guitar amplifiers with the vertical bars on the speaker grill- decorative and also protects the speaker cone
@shango0662 жыл бұрын
@@randyr.parker2698 sorry that was for Greg my bot friend
@randyr.parker26982 жыл бұрын
@@shango066 That's OK, I still got a good laugh. 😂
@SpiritWalkerAdventures2 жыл бұрын
Shango066, you're an absolute treasure. I love your videos. Please keep up the great work!
@vcv65602 жыл бұрын
I saw this model in April at the InfoAge Science and History Museum in New Jersey (International Marconi Day) they had it with the remote. What an amazing piece of industrial art. Someday one will find its way to my collection.
@ricardosalesdemello41302 жыл бұрын
yeah!!! friend shango I loved you working Radio Philco was a jewel!! It's shango you're a great technician!
@johnwsimpson31532 жыл бұрын
Outstanding video. I intended to watch just a few minutes and then watch the rest later, but I just couldn't stop watching until the end...
@teacfan10802 жыл бұрын
I figured it would get adopted out pretty quick. Very unique radio, bet that cost a pretty penny back in the day. Maybe the new owner can do something to make the volume change quicker. For 82 years old and at least somewhat working, is pretty darn good! Cabinet still is shiny in spots. Quite a rare unit.
@DeadKoby2 жыл бұрын
I've seen one of these in an office building just as an art piece. This radio is certainly a nice looking unit compared to what they cat usually drags home.
@aaronbrandenburg24412 жыл бұрын
User image checks out
@jamesmann12432 жыл бұрын
Shango, great video, I just looked on Evil Bay, and they are 2 of the Magic Box remotes listed. Both in the $100.00 range, if any of your other viewers that has an interest in this radio. Yes, Philco's were gimmicky, and cheap. That's why so many are still available today. Good luck finding it a home.
@JCWise-sf9ww2 жыл бұрын
All the call signs on the presets are Chicago radio stations from the 1940's, some still have the same call letters today yet.
@classicdude-mike81742 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this one Shango .. thanks for all you do !
@joes3485 Жыл бұрын
The metal box contains stepper switches and step-relays for station selection and volume up/down controlled by the wireless remote control. The Tyhratron is a special tube for controlling the relays inside the metal box. The vertical shaft AM antenna is an electrostatically shielded AM loop antenna. It helps eliminate static from appliances that may have sparks jumping inside their motors or neon sign lights. This special antenna was a one year feature. The very next year they dropped that feature. That rectangle in the bottom is likely the antenna for the remote control. It operated below the AM broadcast band (Long-Wave frequencies under 500kHz). The "Mystery Control" (Philco's name for their remote, which has what looks like a rotary telephone dial on it) sometimes shows up on eBay as a separate item.
@BobbyS1981 Жыл бұрын
Finally getting around to watching this. I have a Philco Mystery Control in my collection and have been keeping an eye out for a radio. It seems that all I can find locally are orphaned remotes like mine. Hopefully I can find a radio in the near future as I would love to use this innovative radio that was very much ahead of its time. For now the Mystery Control is just a display piece.
@BudTheDrummer2 жыл бұрын
I loved this! At 35 minutes, I believe that's a clock work mechanism adapted to it's function.
@Seiskid2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. Enjoyed seeing inside this set. The remote idea was way cool.
@gretalaube912 жыл бұрын
Watching you wait on that volume control reminds me of how angry my teenage son got when turning on my old Collins 51J. He lost all radio interest right then. I am old enough to have been trained to wait. YMMV.
@1959Berre2 жыл бұрын
Very nice Art Deco cabinet. Well built. It will be adopted in no time.
@jballew22392 жыл бұрын
If I still lived in Arizona, I'd brave the wilds of LA traffic to adopt that. Run a huge Marconi antenna and I bet it'd sill pull in all kinds of fun.
@rca7591a2 жыл бұрын
You seem to find some real gems of radios and TVs. 😎
@LyonsArcade Жыл бұрын
I cannot believe this thing was wireless in the 40s that is crazy. I work on jukeboxes and through the late 80s they were still wired! I don’t believe they started having remote control until the 90s and those are expensive commercial units.
@phillanassa759 Жыл бұрын
And Philco was nice enough the solve the issue of answering the phone, doorbell, that gossiping neighbor across the yard; with a mute function on that 'Mystery Box' remote. I'd love to see how that works to mute audio... Damn it Shango n0w I want one,.. or that Grundig Majestic 3035 you rebuilt..! The Philco Roto-tweebulator still makes me laugh though, Thanks once again for sharing
@Radiowild2 жыл бұрын
The New Jersey Antique Radio Club has a working example of this radio with a working remote control. Just a really cool radio!
@agostinodibella99392 жыл бұрын
That's an impressive radio for it's time! That must have cost big bucks back in the day!
@frankowalker46622 жыл бұрын
It looks gorgeous. 22:09 The book also mentioned a wireless record player at the end of the first paragraph.. It takes forever to turn it off. LOL.
@AIJenkins2 жыл бұрын
@35:30 background sounds matches the observation. Well done and keep ion Shango066ing ⚡️
@mikeschumacher2 жыл бұрын
This is a David Tipton special. Fantastic radio that I would have considered picking up if I had room for it.
@rdg21242 жыл бұрын
Late to the show but thanks for an excellent video. Had no idea wireless remote technology existed back that far, and Philco no less.
@monicapushkin327411 ай бұрын
Saba had a 1950s large tube radio that would search for strong radio stations at the push of a button, with a dedicated motor on the tuning dial, and a wired remote control.
@leyland9999 Жыл бұрын
This is indeed way ahead of its time, beautifully constructed but at the same time overly complicated. One might say it is the radio equivalent of a modern BMW car. Only way better constructed than the plastic fantastic BMW car that won’t last. Greetings, Willem, Hekelingen, The Netherlands.
@johnbellas4902 жыл бұрын
The remote control unit looked like a wooden box with a rotary dial just like a rotary telephone dial. I have both the radio and remote. The frequency for the remote was between 200 Kcs and 450 or so Kcs.and was set by the selling agency so as two sets in neighboring apartments would not interefere with one another!
@mrnmrn12 жыл бұрын
I don't think it was too frequent to have two of these within one square mile. These were surely very expensive.
@LyonsArcade Жыл бұрын
I’m a sucker for these beautiful floor model radios like this I’ve got about seven of them but this particular one is nicer than any of mine I love these things so damn classy
@joeycronan26522 жыл бұрын
Very interesting Shango..... This was ahead of it's time.... Yes it's slow by today's standards but back in 1940 that would be amazing no matter how slow it was. It's to bad today it seems like nothing is being invented any more electronic wise or is that just my imagination. Thanks as always for the video!
@grantbuford58702 жыл бұрын
You should watch “Topper Takes a Trip”. It’s an old movie but Topper goes into a bar to use the phone and plays with the remote instead. He gets confused when the radio changes stations.
@joes99542 жыл бұрын
If I lived closer, this would look great next to my old TVs
@volvo092 жыл бұрын
Wild and wacky radio. Another super interesting upload... Mainly the discovery into that remote... Imagine leaving it on all night by accident with that tube in there .. there goes another set of battery!
@TKomoski2 жыл бұрын
Happy Saturday Sir
@401ksolar2 жыл бұрын
Wow all those rounded corners for safety features that thing is loaded!
@d.c.hammond1302 жыл бұрын
40:00 motor assembly trouble shooting. Dude's insight at electric operations is ENCYCLOPEDIC. A NATIONAL TREASURE
@zulumax12 жыл бұрын
bandersentv lives in Chicago and I sure he would have loved to get his hands on this one. He is working on a monster Philco 37-690X radio that has passive couplers that reduces the cabinet resonances, another Philco marketing gimmick thingy
@craig19742 жыл бұрын
When i seen WGN that told me that this radio was probably from Chicago.
@willieyarger53272 жыл бұрын
Outstanding Shango !! Rare find indeed !!!
@russellhltn13962 жыл бұрын
Nice score on this one. Sure hope it finds a good home - even if it's just a display piece.
@vancouverman43132 жыл бұрын
It would be relatively easy to build a remote control for that radio. Just an Armstrong Oscillator. I like the simple, not overdone look of the cabinet. It's almost more of a late 50's early 60's look as opposed to 1940.
@qwertykeyboard59012 жыл бұрын
Holy shit, even nowadays modern remotes use RF. Thats impressive!
@mrnmrn12 жыл бұрын
It would be great if Bob Andersen was the adopter. Would be so nice for this radio to go back to its homeland, and be restored very thoroughly by Bob.
@walterbatman79492 жыл бұрын
Very beautiful old set and very cool
@n8ux19632 жыл бұрын
Just picked up a decent 39-116 (no remote unit). Your video help will come in handy - maybe; the layout is quite different. Thanks!
@derdo86842 жыл бұрын
Love it, and the way u deliver sarcastic .
@livinlifetothefullest27502 жыл бұрын
180W! Can you imagine running this all day and the power bill comes in and you hadn't a clue what was guzzling all the electricity, I know throw out the fridge nupe, washing machine nupe...
@mrnmrn12 жыл бұрын
Yes, it needs a switch on the back to isolate the power from the remote control receiver, so if you want just to listen to it and not showing off its cool remote control feature to your friends, you can disable it. It draws at least half the power I guess.
@troyendicott9732 жыл бұрын
Beautiful set for it's age hope someone will take good care of it
@d.c.hammond1302 жыл бұрын
Beautiful design and engineering. Great video.
@uxwbill2 жыл бұрын
I think it's a gorgeous radio. I"m intrigued by mention of the wireless phonograph, though I suppose it could have simply made use of a quiet spot on the dial.