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-   -   1951 Leningrad T2 (http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=265845)

orvars 12-06-2015 09:30 AM

1951 Leningrad T2
 
Hello!

Found this old TV when going through my grandpas old stuff.

is this tv worth anything?

havent tried if it works, last time my granpa used it were around 1950-60.

http://s14.postimg.org/g4yuo2ril/IMG_0045.jpg
http://s14.postimg.org/gdwfe04b1/IMG_0047.jpg
http://s14.postimg.org/jfn7nyhfx/IMG_0048.jpg
http://s14.postimg.org/txd9jpia5/IMG_0050.jpg
http://s14.postimg.org/sywwhf4y5/IMG_0051.jpg
http://s14.postimg.org/gzlea3zd9/IMG_0053.jpg
http://s14.postimg.org/q8s5xyxn1/IMG_0054.jpg

Kevin Kuehn 12-06-2015 10:07 AM

Welcome to the Forum. Pretty interesting set you have there. Definitely worth saving, but sort of hard to put a dollar value on it. Probably not to many of us here in the US have seen one before. So where is this set located?

orvars 12-06-2015 11:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevin Kuehn (Post 3150567)
Welcome to the Forum. Pretty interesting set you have there. Definitely worth saving, but sort of hard to put a dollar value on it. Probably not to many of us here in the US have seen one before. So where is this set located?


Thx!

This is located in sweden.

I will ask my grandpa how he got it when i see him next time.

Captainclock 12-07-2015 12:37 PM

It looks Russian, or Eastern European (guessing by the fact that it uses Sanskrit writing on it and the fact that the brand is Leningrad which is a refrence to the capitol of Russia during the days of Vladmir Lenin (who was the one who was responsible for the Russian Revolution and the overthrow of the Romanov Dynasty in Russia, that is also the city that is now known as St. Petersburg, Russia and was known as St. Petersburg prior to the Russian Revolution.) Other than that I've got nothing, an interesting piece for sure. :yes: :scratch2:

Phil Nelson 12-07-2015 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Captainclock (Post 3150672)
It looks Russian, or Eastern European (guessing by the fact that it uses Sanskrit writing

Do you mean Cyrillic writing?

That TV is definitely worth saving. Soviet-era Russian TVs are virtually never seen here in the USA. It would be quite a curiosity in this country, at least to TV collectors. In years of collecting, I have only found one Soviet Russian radio, brought here by a woman who was born in Sweden.

In another VideoKarma discussion, I just ran across a Russian website that includes a page about this TV model:

http://www.rw6ase.narod.ru/00/tw/leningrad_t2.html

In addition to the description and photos, there are links to the operating manual and a short (silent) video showing the TVs being assembled at the factory. I only read English, so I used Google to translate the web page.

Phil Nelson
Phil's Old Radios
http://antiqueradio.org/index.html

wa2ise 12-08-2015 12:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by orvars (Post 3150561)
Hello!

havent tried if it works, last time my granpa used it were around 1950-60.

It will need to have many capacitors replaced before you can power it up. Some of the old caps may fail in a bad way that could cause other hard to obtain parts to be damaged.

orvars 12-08-2015 01:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wa2ise (Post 3150753)
It will need to have many capacitors replaced before you can power it up. Some of the old caps may fail in a bad way that could cause other hard to obtain parts to be damaged.

i will prob not try to start it :)

and what i know, my grandpa only used it once to test it.


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